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Quantitative interactomics in primary T cells unveils TCR signal diversification extent and dynamics.

Guillaume VoisinneKristof KersseKarima ChaouiLiaoxun LuJulie ChaixLichen ZhangMarisa Goncalves MenoitaLaura GirardYoucef OunougheneHui WangOdile Burlet-SchiltzHervé LucheFrédéric FioreMarie MalissenAnne Gonzalez de PeredoYin-Ming LiangRomain RoncagalliBernard Malissen
Published in: Nature immunology (2019)
The activation of T cells by the T cell antigen receptor (TCR) results in the formation of signaling protein complexes (signalosomes), the composition of which has not been analyzed at a systems level. Here, we isolated primary CD4+ T cells from 15 gene-targeted mice, each expressing one tagged form of a canonical protein of the TCR-signaling pathway. Using affinity purification coupled with mass spectrometry, we analyzed the composition and dynamics of the signalosomes assembling around each of the tagged proteins over 600 s of TCR engagement. We showed that the TCR signal-transduction network comprises at least 277 unique proteins involved in 366 high-confidence interactions, and that TCR signals diversify extensively at the level of the plasma membrane. Integrating the cellular abundance of the interacting proteins and their interaction stoichiometry provided a quantitative and contextual view of each documented interaction, permitting anticipation of whether ablation of a single interacting protein can impinge on the whole TCR signal-transduction network.
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