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CD99 activates T cells via a costimulatory function that promotes raft association of TCR complex and tyrosine phosphorylation of TCR ζ
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  • Published: 01 April 2007

CD99 activates T cells via a costimulatory function that promotes raft association of TCR complex and tyrosine phosphorylation of TCR ζ

  • Kwon Ik Oh1,
  • Byoung Kwon Kim,
  • Young Larn Ban,
  • Eun Young Choi,
  • Kyeong Cheon Jung,
  • Im-Soon Lee &
  • …
  • Seong Hoe Park 

Experimental & Molecular Medicine volume 39, pages 176–184 (2007)Cite this article

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  • 38 Citations

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Abstract

We investigated the co-stimulatory role of a cell-surface protein, CD99. Co-ligation of CD99 and suboptimal CD3 induced T-cell activation to a level comparable to that obtained with optimal CD3 or CD3+CD28. We also noted concomitant enhancement of the earliest T-cell receptor (TCR) signaling events. In addition, co-ligation of CD99 and CD3 led to translocation of TCR complexes into the lipid raft, without concomitant migration of CD99 to the raft, and consequent enhancement of TCR ζ-mediated signal 1. These data demonstrate the unique properties of CD99 co-stimulation that distinguish this molecule from CD28 and other raft-resident co-stimulatory factors.

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  1. Department of Pathology, Hallym University College of Medicine, Chuncheon, 200-702, Korea

    Kwon Ik Oh

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  1. Kwon Ik Oh
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  2. Byoung Kwon Kim
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  3. Young Larn Ban
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  7. Seong Hoe Park
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This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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Oh, K., Kim, B., Ban, Y. et al. CD99 activates T cells via a costimulatory function that promotes raft association of TCR complex and tyrosine phosphorylation of TCR ζ. Exp Mol Med 39, 176–184 (2007). https://doi.org/10.1038/emm.2007.20

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  • Published: 01 April 2007

  • Issue date: 01 April 2007

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/emm.2007.20

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Keywords

  • antigens
  • lymphocyte activation
  • receptors, antigen, T-cell
  • signal transduction
  • T lymphocytes

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Experimental & Molecular Medicine (Exp Mol Med)

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ISSN 1226-3613 (print)

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