Mg2+ regulation of kinase signaling and immune function

Chryssa Kanellopoulou(National Institutes of Health), Alex George(National Institutes of Health), Evan Masutani(National Institutes of Health), Jennifer L. Cannons(National Institutes of Health), Juan C. Ravell(National Institutes of Health), Tori N. Yamamoto(National Institutes of Health), Margery Smelkinson(National Institutes of Health), Ping Jiang(National Institutes of Health), Mami Matsuda‐Lennikov(National Institutes of Health), Julie Reilley(National Institutes of Health), Robin Handon(National Human Genome Research Institute), Ping‐Hsien Lee(National Institutes of Health), J. Richard Miller(Merck & Co., Inc., Rahway, NJ, USA (United States)), Nicholas P. Restifo(National Institutes of Health), Lixin Zheng(National Institutes of Health), Pamela L. Schwartzberg(National Institutes of Health), Matthew A. Young(University of Michigan), Michael J. Lenardo(National Institutes of Health)
The Journal of Experimental Medicine
June 13, 2019
Cited by 87

Abstract

Mg2+ is required at micromolar concentrations as a cofactor for ATP, enzymatic reactions, and other biological processes. We show that decreased extracellular Mg2+ reduced intracellular Mg2+ levels and impaired the Ca2+ flux, activation marker up-regulation, and proliferation after T cell receptor (TCR) stimulation. Reduced Mg2+ specifically impairs TCR signal transduction by IL-2–inducible T cell kinase (ITK) due to a requirement for a regulatory Mg2+ in the catalytic pocket of ITK. We also show that altered catalytic efficiency by millimolar changes in free basal Mg2+ is an unrecognized but conserved feature of other serine/threonine and tyrosine kinases, suggesting a Mg2+ regulatory paradigm of kinase function. Finally, a reduced serum Mg2+ concentration in mice causes an impaired CD8+ T cell response to influenza A virus infection, reduces T cell activation, and exacerbates morbidity. Thus, Mg2+ directly regulates the active site of specific kinases during T cell responses, and maintaining a high serum Mg2+ concentration is important for antiviral immunity in otherwise healthy animals.


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