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Co‐recruitment analysis of the CBL and CBLB signalosomes in primary T cells identifies CD5 as a key regulator of TCR‐induced ubiquitylation
Authors:Karima Chaoui  Frédéric Fiore  Elise Bergot  Laura Girard  Marie Malissen  Odile Burlet‐Schiltz  Anne Gonzalez de Peredo  Bernard Malissen  Romain Roncagalli
Institution:1. Institut de Pharmacologie et de Biologie Structurale, Département Biologie Structural Biophysique, Protéomique Génopole Toulouse Midi Pyrénées, CNRS UMR 5089, Toulouse Cedex, France;2. Centre d'Immunophénomique, Aix Marseille Université UM2, Inserm US012, CNRS UMS3367, Marseille, France;3. Centre d'Immunologie de Marseille‐Luminy, Aix Marseille Université, Inserm, CNRS, Marseille, France
Abstract:T‐cell receptor (TCR) signaling is essential for the function of T cells and negatively regulated by the E3 ubiquitin–protein ligases CBL and CBLB. Here, we combined mouse genetics and affinity purification coupled to quantitative mass spectrometry to monitor the dynamics of the CBL and CBLB signaling complexes that assemble in normal T cells over 600 seconds of TCR stimulation. We identify most previously known CBL and CBLB interacting partners, as well as a majority of proteins that have not yet been implicated in those signaling complexes. We exploit correlations in protein association with CBL and CBLB as a function of time of TCR stimulation for predicting the occurrence of direct physical association between them. By combining co‐recruitment analysis with biochemical analysis, we demonstrated that the CD5 transmembrane receptor constitutes a key scaffold for CBL‐ and CBLB‐mediated ubiquitylation following TCR engagement. Our results offer an integrated view of the CBL and CBLB signaling complexes induced by TCR stimulation and provide a molecular basis for their negative regulatory function in normal T cells.
Keywords:   CBL        CBLB     CD5  ubiquitylation
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