Super-complexes of adhesion GPCRs and neural guidance receptors

Latrophilin adhesion-GPCRs (Lphn1–3 or ADGRL1–3) and Unc5 cell guidance receptors (Unc5A–D) interact with FLRT proteins (FLRT1–3), thereby promoting cell adhesion and repulsion, respectively. How the three proteins interact and function simultaneously is poorly understood. We show that Unc5D interac...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2016-04, Vol.7 (1), p.11184-13, Article 11184
Hauptverfasser: Jackson, Verity A., Mehmood, Shahid, Chavent, Matthieu, Roversi, Pietro, Carrasquero, Maria, del Toro, Daniel, Seyit-Bremer, Goenuel, Ranaivoson, Fanomezana M., Comoletti, Davide, Sansom, Mark S. P., Robinson, Carol V., Klein, Rüdiger, Seiradake, Elena
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Latrophilin adhesion-GPCRs (Lphn1–3 or ADGRL1–3) and Unc5 cell guidance receptors (Unc5A–D) interact with FLRT proteins (FLRT1–3), thereby promoting cell adhesion and repulsion, respectively. How the three proteins interact and function simultaneously is poorly understood. We show that Unc5D interacts with FLRT2 in cis , controlling cell adhesion in response to externally presented Lphn3. The ectodomains of the three proteins bind cooperatively. Crystal structures of the ternary complex formed by the extracellular domains reveal that Lphn3 dimerizes when bound to FLRT2:Unc5, resulting in a stoichiometry of 1:1:2 (FLRT2:Unc5D:Lphn3). This 1:1:2 complex further dimerizes to form a larger ‘super-complex’ (2:2:4), using a previously undescribed binding motif in the Unc5D TSP1 domain. Molecular dynamics simulations, point-directed mutagenesis and mass spectrometry demonstrate the stability and molecular properties of these complexes. Our data exemplify how receptors increase their functional repertoire by forming different context-dependent higher-order complexes. FLRT proteins are known to interact with Lphns and Unc5s, mediating cell adhesion and repulsion respectively. Here the authors use crystallography, native mass spectrometry, molecular dynamics simulations and cell-based assays to show that these three proteins form large super-complexes with functions distinct from their smaller subcomplexes.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms11184