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Interleukin-2 signal transduction in human NK cells: multisite phosphorylation and activation of the tyrosine kinase p56lck.
Authors:K J Einspahr  R T Abraham  C J Dick  P J Leibson
Affiliation:Department of Immunology, Mayo Clinic and Foundation, Rochester, Minnesota 55905.
Abstract:Interleukin-2 (IL-2) potently stimulates natural killer (NK) cell proliferation and cytotoxic function. However, the molecular mechanisms by which IL-2 delivers activation signals from the IL-2 receptor to the NK cell interior are incompletely understood. Previous studies demonstrated that IL-2 stimulation induced the tyrosine phosphorylation of multiple proteins in NK cells, together with a prominent reduction in the electrophoretic mobility of p56lck. The present studies indicate that IL-2 induces a rapid (< or = 1 min) increase in the catalytic activity of p56lck, as measured by increases in protein tyrosine kinase activity in vitro. Furthermore, in response to IL-2, p56lck itself undergoes complex alterations in serine and tyrosine phosphorylation. Cyanogen bromide cleavage maps indicate that IL-2 stimulates a pronounced increase in the phosphorylation of the NH2-terminal region of p56lck containing multiple known sites of serine phosphorylation. In addition, IL-2 induced a marked increase in the phosphorylation of a COOH-terminal peptide containing the regulatory Tyr-505 residue of p56lck. These results suggest that p56lck serves as a substrate for both protein serine and tyrosine kinases activated during stimulation of this cell type with IL-2. Furthermore, these results indicate that the pleiotropic effects of IL-2 on NK cell physiology are initiated and regulated by a complex and multitiered interaction of different protein kinases including p56lck.
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