Insights into the low adhesive capacity of human T-cadherin from the NMR structure of its N-terminal extracellular domain

被引:25
作者
Department of Structural Biology, Biozentrum, University of Basel, 4056 Basel, Switzerland [1 ]
不详 [2 ]
不详 [3 ]
机构
[1] Department of Structural Biology, Biozentrum, University of Basel
[2] Department of Biophysical Chemistry, Biozentrum, University of Basel, 4056 Basel
[3] Dept. of Structural Biology, Biozentrum, University of Basel, 4056 Basel
来源
J. Biol. Chem. | 2008年 / 34卷 / 23485-23495期
关键词
Calcium; -; Dimers; Glycoproteins;
D O I
10.1074/jbc.M708335200
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
T-cadherin is unique among the family of type I cadherins, because it lacks transmembrane and cytosolic domains, and attaches to the membrane via a glycophosphoinositol anchor. The N-terminal cadherin repeat of T-cadherin (Tcad1) is ≈30% identical to E-, N-, and other classical cadherins. However, it lacks many amino acids crucial for their adhesive function of classical cadherins. Among others, Trp-2, which is the key residue forming the canonical strand-exchange dimer, is replaced by an isoleucine. Here, we report the NMR structure of the first cadherin repeat of T-cadherin (Tcad1). Tcad1, as other cadherin domains, adopts a β-barrel structure with a Greek key folding topology. However, Tcad1 is monomeric in the absence and presence of calcium. Accordingly, lle-2 binds into a hydrophobic pocket on the same protomer and participates in an N-terminal β-sheet. Specific amino acid replacements compared to classical cadherins reduce the size of the binding pocket for residue 2 and alter the backbone conformation and flexibility around residues 5 and 15 as well as many electrostatic interactions. These modifications apparently stabilize the monomeric form and make it less susceptible to a conformational switch upon calcium binding. The absence of a tendency for homoassociation observed by NMR is consistent with electron microscopy and solid-phase binding data of the full T-cadherin ectodomain (Tcad1-5). The apparent low adhesiveness of T-cadherin suggests that it is likely to be involved in reversible and dynamic cellular adhesion-deadhesion processes, which are consistent with its role in cell growth and migration. © 2008 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
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页码:23485 / 23495
页数:10
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