The Tec family member Bruton's tyrosine kinase (Btk) is a cytoplasmic
protein tyrosine kinase that transduces signals from the pre-B and B cell
receptor (BCR). Btk is involved in pre-B cell maturation by regulating
IL-7 responsiveness, cell surface phenotype changes, and the activation of
lambda L chain gene rearrangements. In mature B cells, Btk is essential
for BCR-mediated proliferation and survival. Upon BCR stimulation, Btk is
transphosphorylated at position Y551, which promotes its catalytic
activity and subsequently results in autophosphorylation at position Y223
in the Src homology 3 domain. To address the significance of Y223
autophosphorylation and the requirement of enzymatic activity for Btk
function in vivo, we generated transgenic mice that express the
autophosphorylation site mutant Y223F and the kinase-inactive mutant
K430R, respectively. We found that Y223 autophosphorylation was not
required for the regulation of IL-7 responsiveness and cell surface
phenotype changes in differentiating pre-B cells, or for peripheral B cell
differentiation. However, expression of the Y223F-Btk transgene could not
fully rescue the reduction of lambda L chain usage in Btk-deficient mice.
In contrast, transgenic expression of kinase-inactive K430R-Btk completely
reconstituted lambda usage in Btk-deficient mice, but the defective
modulation of pre-B cell surface markers, peripheral B cell survival, and
BCR-mediated NF-kappaB induction were partially corrected. From these
findings, we conclude that: 1) autophosphorylation at position Y223 is not
essential for Btk function in vivo, except for regulation of lambda L
chain usage, and 2) during B cell development, Btk partially acts as an
adapter molecule, independent of its catalytic activity