Frontiers in Cell and Developmental Biology (Sep 2020)

Increased Protein Stability and Interleukin-2 Production of a LATG131D Variant With Possible Implications for T Cell Anergy

  • Mikel M. Arbulo-Echevarria,
  • Inmaculada Vico-Barranco,
  • Isaac Narbona-Sánchez,
  • Francisco García-Cózar,
  • Francisco García-Cózar,
  • Arkadiusz Miazek,
  • Enrique Aguado,
  • Enrique Aguado

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fcell.2020.561503
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8

Abstract

Read online

The adaptor LAT plays a crucial role in the transduction of signals coming from the TCR/CD3 complex. Phosphorylation of some of its tyrosines generates recruitment sites for other cytosolic signaling molecules. Tyrosine 132 in human LAT is essential for PLC-γ activation and calcium influx generation. It has been recently reported that a conserved glycine residue preceding tyrosine 132 decreases its phosphorylation kinetics, which constitutes a mechanism for ligand discrimination. Here we confirm that a LAT mutant in which glycine 131 has been substituted by an aspartate (LATG131D) increases phosphorylation of Tyr132, PLC-γ activation and calcium influx generation. Interestingly, the LATG131D mutant has a slower protein turnover while being equally sensitive to Fas-mediated protein cleavage by caspases. Moreover, J.CaM2 cells expressing LATG131D secrete greater amounts of interleukin-2 (IL-2) in response to CD3/CD28 engagement. However, despite this increased IL-2 secretion, J.CaM2 cells expressing the LATG131D mutant are more sensitive to inhibition of IL-2 production by pre-treatment with anti-CD3, which points to a possible role of this residue in the generation of anergy. Our results suggest that the increased kinetics of LAT Tyr132 phosphorylation could contribute to the establishment of T cell anergy, and thus constitutes an earliest known intracellular event responsible for the induction of peripheral tolerance.

Keywords