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Kinome Analysis of Receptor-Induced Phosphorylation in Human Natural Killer Cells

BACKGROUND: Natural killer (NK) cells contribute to the defense against infected and transformed cells through the engagement of multiple germline-encoded activation receptors. Stimulation of the Fc receptor CD16 alone is sufficient for NK cell activation, whereas other receptors, such as 2B4 (CD244...

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Autores principales: König, Sebastian, Nimtz, Manfred, Scheiter, Maxi, Ljunggren, Hans-Gustaf, Bryceson, Yenan T., Jänsch, Lothar
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3251586/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22238634
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0029672
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author König, Sebastian
Nimtz, Manfred
Scheiter, Maxi
Ljunggren, Hans-Gustaf
Bryceson, Yenan T.
Jänsch, Lothar
author_facet König, Sebastian
Nimtz, Manfred
Scheiter, Maxi
Ljunggren, Hans-Gustaf
Bryceson, Yenan T.
Jänsch, Lothar
author_sort König, Sebastian
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Natural killer (NK) cells contribute to the defense against infected and transformed cells through the engagement of multiple germline-encoded activation receptors. Stimulation of the Fc receptor CD16 alone is sufficient for NK cell activation, whereas other receptors, such as 2B4 (CD244) and DNAM-1 (CD226), act synergistically. After receptor engagement, protein kinases play a major role in signaling networks controlling NK cell effector functions. However, it has not been characterized systematically which of all kinases encoded by the human genome (kinome) are involved in NK cell activation. RESULTS: A kinase-selective phosphoproteome approach enabled the determination of 188 kinases expressed in human NK cells. Crosslinking of CD16 as well as 2B4 and DNAM-1 revealed a total of 313 distinct kinase phosphorylation sites on 109 different kinases. Phosphorylation sites on 21 kinases were similarly regulated after engagement of either CD16 or co-engagement of 2B4 and DNAM-1. Among those, increased phosphorylation of FYN, KCC2G (CAMK2), FES, and AAK1, as well as the reduced phosphorylation of MARK2, were reproducibly observed both after engagement of CD16 and co-engagement of 2B4 and DNAM-1. Notably, only one phosphorylation on PAK4 was differentally regulated. CONCLUSIONS: The present study has identified a significant portion of the NK cell kinome and defined novel phosphorylation sites in primary lymphocytes. Regulated phosphorylations observed in the early phase of NK cell activation imply these kinases are involved in NK cell signaling. Taken together, this study suggests a largely shared signaling pathway downstream of distinct activation receptors and constitutes a valuable resource for further elucidating the regulation of NK cell effector responses.
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spelling pubmed-32515862012-01-11 Kinome Analysis of Receptor-Induced Phosphorylation in Human Natural Killer Cells König, Sebastian Nimtz, Manfred Scheiter, Maxi Ljunggren, Hans-Gustaf Bryceson, Yenan T. Jänsch, Lothar PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: Natural killer (NK) cells contribute to the defense against infected and transformed cells through the engagement of multiple germline-encoded activation receptors. Stimulation of the Fc receptor CD16 alone is sufficient for NK cell activation, whereas other receptors, such as 2B4 (CD244) and DNAM-1 (CD226), act synergistically. After receptor engagement, protein kinases play a major role in signaling networks controlling NK cell effector functions. However, it has not been characterized systematically which of all kinases encoded by the human genome (kinome) are involved in NK cell activation. RESULTS: A kinase-selective phosphoproteome approach enabled the determination of 188 kinases expressed in human NK cells. Crosslinking of CD16 as well as 2B4 and DNAM-1 revealed a total of 313 distinct kinase phosphorylation sites on 109 different kinases. Phosphorylation sites on 21 kinases were similarly regulated after engagement of either CD16 or co-engagement of 2B4 and DNAM-1. Among those, increased phosphorylation of FYN, KCC2G (CAMK2), FES, and AAK1, as well as the reduced phosphorylation of MARK2, were reproducibly observed both after engagement of CD16 and co-engagement of 2B4 and DNAM-1. Notably, only one phosphorylation on PAK4 was differentally regulated. CONCLUSIONS: The present study has identified a significant portion of the NK cell kinome and defined novel phosphorylation sites in primary lymphocytes. Regulated phosphorylations observed in the early phase of NK cell activation imply these kinases are involved in NK cell signaling. Taken together, this study suggests a largely shared signaling pathway downstream of distinct activation receptors and constitutes a valuable resource for further elucidating the regulation of NK cell effector responses. Public Library of Science 2012-01-04 /pmc/articles/PMC3251586/ /pubmed/22238634 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0029672 Text en König et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
König, Sebastian
Nimtz, Manfred
Scheiter, Maxi
Ljunggren, Hans-Gustaf
Bryceson, Yenan T.
Jänsch, Lothar
Kinome Analysis of Receptor-Induced Phosphorylation in Human Natural Killer Cells
title Kinome Analysis of Receptor-Induced Phosphorylation in Human Natural Killer Cells
title_full Kinome Analysis of Receptor-Induced Phosphorylation in Human Natural Killer Cells
title_fullStr Kinome Analysis of Receptor-Induced Phosphorylation in Human Natural Killer Cells
title_full_unstemmed Kinome Analysis of Receptor-Induced Phosphorylation in Human Natural Killer Cells
title_short Kinome Analysis of Receptor-Induced Phosphorylation in Human Natural Killer Cells
title_sort kinome analysis of receptor-induced phosphorylation in human natural killer cells
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3251586/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22238634
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0029672
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