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Published byJoseph Elwin Bradford Modified over 9 years ago
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TCR ( seen here in a ternary complex …)
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TCR’s come in two flavors…
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TCR’s (like Ig’s) have immense diversity
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5461 ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? 4 0 + 4 1 + 4 2 + 4 3 + 4 4 + 4 5 + 4 6 = 5461 (2 2 ) 0 + (2 2 ) 1 + (2 2 ) 2 + (2 2 ) 3 + (2 2 ) 4 + (2 2 ) 5 + (2 2 ) 6 = 5461 2 0 + 2 2 + 2 4 + 2 6 + 2 8 + 2 10 + 2 12 = 5461
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“CD3” two heterodimers & one homodimer… specifically: ( a variant… is obtained by alternative splicing of the template )
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“CD3” All of the CD3 proteins have a negative charge (aspartic acid) in the transmembrane helix. Interacts with positive charge in the TCR transmembrane component. All CD3 proteins have ITAM (immunoreceptor tyrosine activation motifs) recognized by tyrosine kinases. ( Members of the larger MIRR [multi chain immune recognition receptor] class.)
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“CD3” gamma, delta, and epsilon are members of the immunoglobulin superfamily. Each chain has an immunoglobulin domain + a transmembrane component + a cytoplasmic tail (approximately 44 to 55 amino acids long) 90% of chains with zeta are homodimers. Zeta and eta have 9 aa external domains, a transmembrane component and a cytoplasmic tail of 113 aa in zeta and 155 aa in eta; the two variants are transcripts of a common gene; the transcripts are alternatively spliced.
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CD 4 & CD8 A heterodimer (usually sometimes ) One immunoglobulin domain “small” glycoproteins (30 – 38 kDa) -S—S- + transmembrane component + cytoplasmic tail (25-27 residues) 55 kDa monomeric glycoprotein Four immunoglobulin domains + a transmembrane component + a long cytoplasmic domain (with three serine residues)
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CD4 and MHC-II The length of immunoglobulin folds in CD4 is equal to the two immunoglobulin folds in a TCR plus the peptide binding domain in MHC-II and the proximal immunoglobulin fold in MHC-II. Thus, these components can associate. Specifically, the most distal immunoglobulin fold of CD4 associates with the $2 immunoglobulin fold of MHC-II.
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CD4 and MHC-II
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Other molecules Lots of them… and, they’re important too!
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Other molecules
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