The Scaffolding Protein Synapse-Associated Protein 97 Is Required for Enhanced Signaling Through Isotype-Switched IgG Memory B Cell Receptors

Wanli Liu(National Institutes of Health), Elizabeth Chen(National Institutes of Health), Xing Wang Zhao(Tsinghua University), Zhengpeng Wan(Tsinghua University), Yi Gao(Tsinghua University), Angel M. Davey(National Institutes of Health), Eric Huang(National Institutes of Health), Lijia Zhang(National Institutes of Health), Jillian Crocetti(University of California, Los Angeles), Gabriel J. Sandoval(Washington University in St. Louis), Michael Joyce(National Institutes of Health), Carrie Miceli(University of California, Los Angeles), Jan Lukszo(National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases), L. Aravind(National Institutes of Health), Wojciech Swat(Washington University in St. Louis), Joseph Brzostowski(National Institutes of Health), Susan K. Pierce(National Institutes of Health)
Science Signaling
July 31, 2012
Cited by 62

Abstract

After their first encounter with a foreign antigen, naïve B cells that have immunoglobulin M (IgM) B cell receptors (BCRs) trigger the primary antibody response and the generation of memory B cells with IgG BCRs. When these memory B cells reencounter the same antigen, the cell surface IgG BCRs stimulate their rapid differentiation into plasma cells that release large amounts of IgG antibodies. We showed that the conserved cytoplasmic tail of the IgG BCR, which contains a putative PDZ (postsynaptic density 95/disc large/zona occludens 1)-binding motif, associated with synapse-associated protein 97 (SAP97), a PDZ domain-containing scaffolding molecule that is involved in controlling receptor density and signal strength at neuronal synapses. SAP97 accumulated and bound to IgG BCRs in the immunological synapses that formed in response to B cell engagement with antigen. Knocking down SAP97 in IgG⁺ B cells or mutating the putative PDZ-binding motif in the BCR tail impaired formation of the immunological synapse, initiation of IgG BCR signaling, and downstream activation of the mitogen-activated protein kinase p38. Thus, heightened B cell memory responses are encoded, in part, by a mechanism that involves SAP97 serving as a scaffolding protein in the IgG BCR immunological synapse.


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