Activation of T cells upon engagement of the T cell antigen receptor rapidly leads to a number of phosphorylation and plasma membrane recruitment events. For example, translocation of phospholipase-Cγ1 (PLC-γ1) to the plasma membrane and its association with the transmembrane adapter protein LAT and two other adapter proteins, Gads and SLP-76, are critical events in the early T cell activation process. We have previously characterized the formation of a tetrameric LAT-Gads-SLP-76-PLC-γ1 complex by reconstitution in vitro and have also characterized the thermodynamics of tetramer formation. In the current study, we define how PLC-γ1 recruitment to liposomes, which serve as a plasma membrane surrogate, and PLC-γ1 activation are regulated both independently and additively by recruitment of PLC-γ1 to phosphorylated LAT, by formation of the LAT-Gads-SLP-76-PLC-γ1 tetramer, and by tyrosine phosphorylation of PLC-γ1. The recently solved structure of PLC-γ1 indicates that, in the resting state, several PLC-γ1 domains inhibit its enzymatic activity and contact with the plasma membrane. We propose the multiple cooperative steps that we observed likely lead to conformational alterations in the regulatory domains of PLC-γ1, enabling contact with its membrane substrate, disinhibition of PLC-γ1 enzymatic activity, and production of the phosphoinositide cleavage products necessary for T cell activation.
Keywords: T cell activation; in vitro reconstitution; phospholipase C; tyrosine phosphorylation.
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