Graduate Program in Molecular and Cellular Pharmacology, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794, USA.
Hormel Institute, University of Minnesota, 801 16th Ave NE, Austin, MN 55912, USA.
Int J Mol Sci. 2023 May 16;24(10):8834. doi: 10.3390/ijms24108834.
The suppressor of TCR signaling (Sts) proteins, Sts-1 and Sts-2, are a pair of closely related signaling molecules that belong to the histidine phosphatase (HP) family of enzymes by virtue of an evolutionarily conserved C-terminal phosphatase domain. HPs derive their name from a conserved histidine that is important for catalytic activity and the current evidence indicates that the Sts HP domain plays a critical functional role. Sts-1 has been shown to possess a readily measurable protein tyrosine phosphatase activity that regulates a number of important tyrosine-kinase-mediated signaling pathways. The in vitro catalytic activity of Sts-2 is significantly lower than that of Sts-1, and its signaling role is less characterized. The highly conserved unique structure of the Sts proteins, in which additional domains, including one that exhibits a novel phosphodiesterase activity, are juxtaposed together with the phosphatase domain, suggesting that Sts-1 and -2 occupy a specialized intracellular signaling niche. To date, the analysis of Sts function has centered predominately around the role of Sts-1 and -2 in regulating host immunity and other responses associated with cells of hematopoietic origin. This includes their negative regulatory role in T cells, platelets, mast cells and other cell types, as well as their less defined roles in regulating host responses to microbial infection. Regarding the latter, the use of a mouse model lacking Sts expression has been used to demonstrate that Sts contributes non-redundantly to the regulation of host immunity toward a fungal pathogen () and a Gram-negative bacterial pathogen (). In particular, -/- animals demonstrate significant resistance to lethal infections of both pathogens, a phenotype that is correlated with some heightened anti-microbial responses of phagocytes derived from mutant mice. Altogether, the past several years have seen steady progress in our understanding of Sts biology.
抑制性 T 细胞受体信号(Sts)蛋白,Sts-1 和 Sts-2,是一对密切相关的信号分子,它们属于组氨酸磷酸酶(HP)家族的酶,由于进化上保守的 C 末端磷酸酶结构域。HP 这个名字来源于一个对催化活性很重要的保守组氨酸,目前的证据表明 Sts HP 结构域起着关键的功能作用。Sts-1 被证明具有可测量的蛋白酪氨酸磷酸酶活性,可调节许多重要的酪氨酸激酶介导的信号通路。Sts-2 的体外催化活性明显低于 Sts-1,其信号作用特征不太明确。Sts 蛋白的高度保守的独特结构,其中包括一个具有新型磷酸二酯酶活性的结构域,与磷酸酶结构域并列在一起,表明 Sts-1 和 -2 占据了一个特殊的细胞内信号位。迄今为止,Sts 功能的分析主要集中在 Sts-1 和 -2 在调节宿主免疫和与造血细胞相关的其他反应中的作用。这包括它们在 T 细胞、血小板、肥大细胞和其他细胞类型中的负调节作用,以及它们在调节宿主对微生物感染的反应中的作用不明确。关于后者,使用缺乏 Sts 表达的小鼠模型已被用于证明 Sts 对调节宿主对真菌病原体()和革兰氏阴性细菌病原体()的免疫反应具有非冗余作用。特别是,-/- 动物对两种病原体的致死性感染表现出显著的抗性,这种表型与突变小鼠来源的吞噬细胞的一些增强的抗微生物反应相关。总的来说,过去几年我们对 Sts 生物学的理解取得了稳步的进展。