van der Merwe P A, McNamee P N, Davies E A, Barclay A N, Davis S J
MRC Cellular Immunology Unit, Sir William Dunn School of Pathology, University of Oxford, UK.
Curr Biol. 1995 Jan 1;5(1):74-84. doi: 10.1016/s0960-9822(95)00019-4.
The T-lymphocyte cell-surface molecule, CD2, was the first heterophilic cell-adhesion molecule to be discovered and has become an important paradigm for understanding the structural basis of cell adhesion. Interaction of CD2 with its ligands. CD58 (in humans) and CD48 (in mice and rats), contributes to antigen recognition by T cells. CD2, CD48 and CD58 are closely related members of the immunoglobulin superfamily and their extracellular regions are predicted to have very similar structures. The three-dimensional crystal structure of this region of CD2 has been determined, revealing two immunoglobulin domains with the ligand-binding site situated on an exposed beta sheet in the membrane-distal domain. This GFCC'C" beta sheet is also involved in a homophilic 'head-to-head' interaction in the CD2 crystal lattice, which has been proposed to be a model for the interactions of CD2 with its ligands.
We show that the CD2-binding site on rat CD48 lies on the equivalent beta-sheet of its membrane-distal immunoglobulin domain. By making complementary mutations, we have shown that two charged residues in the CD48 ligand-binding site interact directly with two oppositely charged residues in CD2's ligand-binding site. These results indicate that the amino-terminal immunoglobulin domains of CD2 and CD48 bind each other in the same orientation as the CD2-CD2 crystal lattice interaction, strongly supporting the suggestion that CD2 interacts head-to-head with its ligand. Modelling CD48 onto the CD2 structure reveals that the CD2-CD48 complex spans approximately the same distance (134 A) as predicted for the complex between the T-cell receptor and the peptide-bound major histocompatibility complex (MHC) molecule.
Our results, together with recent structural studies of CD2, provide the first indication of the specific topology of a cell-adhesion molecule complex. The similar dimensions predicted for the CD2-CD48 complex and the complex between the T-cell receptor and the peptide-bound MHC molecule suggest that one of the functions of CD2 may be to position the plasma membranes of the T cell and the antigen-presenting (or target) cell at the optimal distance for the low-affinity interaction between the T-cell receptor and the peptide-bound MHC molecule.
T淋巴细胞细胞表面分子CD2是首个被发现的异嗜性细胞黏附分子,已成为理解细胞黏附结构基础的重要范例。CD2与其配体(人类中的CD58以及小鼠和大鼠中的CD48)的相互作用有助于T细胞对抗原的识别。CD2、CD48和CD58是免疫球蛋白超家族的密切相关成员,预计它们的细胞外区域具有非常相似的结构。已确定CD2该区域的三维晶体结构,揭示出两个免疫球蛋白结构域,其配体结合位点位于膜远端结构域中一个暴露的β折叠片上。这个GFCC'C"β折叠片也参与了CD2晶格中的同源性“头对头”相互作用,有人提出这是CD2与其配体相互作用的模型。
我们发现大鼠CD48上的CD2结合位点位于其膜远端免疫球蛋白结构域的等效β折叠片上。通过进行互补突变,我们表明CD48配体结合位点中的两个带电荷残基与CD2配体结合位点中的两个带相反电荷的残基直接相互作用。这些结果表明,CD2和CD48的氨基末端免疫球蛋白结构域以与CD2 - CD2晶格相互作用相同的方向相互结合,有力地支持了CD2与其配体进行头对头相互作用的观点。将CD48模拟到CD2结构上显示,CD2 - CD48复合物跨越的距离(134 Å)与预测的T细胞受体与肽结合的主要组织相容性复合体(MHC)分子之间的复合物的距离大致相同。
我们的结果与最近对CD2的结构研究一起,首次表明了细胞黏附分子复合物的特定拓扑结构。预测的CD2 - CD48复合物与T细胞受体和肽结合的MHC分子之间的复合物具有相似尺寸,这表明CD2的功能之一可能是将T细胞和抗原呈递(或靶)细胞的质膜定位在T细胞受体与肽结合的MHC分子之间低亲和力相互作用的最佳距离处。