The structure of the zetazeta transmembrane dimer reveals features essential for its assembly with the T cell receptor.

Article Details

Citation

Call ME, Schnell JR, Xu C, Lutz RA, Chou JJ, Wucherpfennig KW

The structure of the zetazeta transmembrane dimer reveals features essential for its assembly with the T cell receptor.

Cell. 2006 Oct 20;127(2):355-68.

PubMed ID
17055436 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The T cell receptor (TCR) alphabeta heterodimer communicates ligand binding to the cell interior via noncovalently associated CD3gammaepsilon, CD3deltaepsilon, and zetazeta dimers. While structures of extracellular components of the TCR-CD3 complex are known, the transmembrane (TM) domains that mediate assembly have eluded structural characterization. Incorporation of the zetazeta signaling module is known to require one basic TCRalpha and two zetazeta aspartic acid TM residues. We report the NMR structure of the zetazeta(TM) dimer, a left-handed coiled coil with substantial polar contacts. Mutagenesis experiments demonstrate that three polar positions are critical for zetazeta dimerization and assembly with TCR. The two aspartic acids create a single structural unit at the zetazeta interface stabilized by extensive hydrogen bonding, and there is evidence for a structural water molecule (or molecules) within close proximity. This structural unit, representing only the second transmembrane dimer interface solved to date, serves as a paradigm for the assembly of all modules involved in TCR signaling.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
T-cell surface glycoprotein CD3 zeta chainP20963Details