Literature citations

Essential role for ZAP-70 in both positive and negative selection of thymocytes.

During thymic development, T cells that can recognize foreign antigen in association with self major histocompatibility complex (MHC) are selected for survival (positive selection) and autoreactive T cells are eliminated (negative selection). Both of these selective events are mediated by interaction between the T-cell receptor (TCR) and the peptide-MHC complex. But the signalling pathways that lead to cell survival or to cell death are still unclear. ZAP-70 is a protein tyrosine kinase (PTK) that is associated with the TCR signalling subunits (CD3 and zeta) and is expressed in T cells and natural killer cells. It has been shown that ZAP-70 plays a crucial role in T-cell activation and development. Here we show that mice lacking ZAP-70 had neither CD4 nor CD8 single-positive T cells, but human ZAP-70 reconstituted both CD4 and CD8 single- positive populations. Moreover, ZAP-70-/- thymocytes were not deleted by peptide antigens. Natural killer cell function was intact in the absence of ZAP-70. These data suggest that ZAP-70 is a central signalling molecule during thymic selection for CD4 and CD8 lineage.

Related UniProtKB entries

Browse all 26 entries
We'd like to inform you that we have updated our Privacy Notice to comply with Europe’s new General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) that applies since 25 May 2018.
FeedbackHelp