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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 103(42): 15434-9, 2006 Oct 17.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17023539

RESUMO

The mechanism that drives the segregation of cells into tissue-specific subpopulations during development is largely attributed to differences in intercellular adhesion. This process requires the cadherin family of calcium-dependent glycoproteins. A widely held view is that protein-level discrimination between different cadherins on cell surfaces drives this sorting process. Despite this postulated molecular selectivity, adhesion selectivity has not been quantitatively verified at the protein level. In this work, molecular force measurements and bead aggregation assays tested whether differences in cadherin bond strengths could account for cell sorting in vivo and in vitro. Studies were conducted with chicken N-cadherin, canine E-cadherin, and Xenopus C-cadherin. Both qualitative bead aggregation and quantitative force measurements show that the cadherins cross-react. Furthermore, heterophilic adhesion is not substantially weaker than homophilic adhesion, and the measured differences in adhesion do not correlate with cell sorting behavior. These results suggest that the basis for cell segregation during morphogenesis does not map exclusively to protein-level differences in cadherin adhesion.


Assuntos
Caderinas/metabolismo , Conformação Proteica , Proteínas de Xenopus/metabolismo , Animais , Linhagem Celular , Galinhas , Cricetinae , Cães , Humanos , Bicamadas Lipídicas/química , Morfogênese , Ligação Proteica , Estresse Mecânico , Xenopus laevis
2.
Biochemistry ; 45(22): 6930-9, 2006 Jun 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16734428

RESUMO

This work describes quantitative force and bead aggregation measurements of the adhesion and binding mechanisms of canine E-cadherin mutants W2A, D134A, D103A, D216A, D325A, and D436A. The W2A mutation affects the formation of the N-terminal strand dimer, and the remaining mutations target calcium binding sites at the interdomain junctions. Surface force measurements show that the full ectodomain of canine E-cadherin forms two bound states that span two intermembrane gap distances. The outer bond coincides with adhesion between the N-terminal extracellular domains (EC1) and the inner bond corresponds to adhesion via extracellular domain 3 (EC3). The W2A, D103A, D134A, and D216A mutations all eliminated adhesion between the N-terminal domains, and they attenuated or nearly eliminated the inner bond. The W2A mutant, which does not destabilize the protein structure, attenuates binding via EC3, which is separated from the mutation by several hundred amino acids. This long-range effect suggests that the presence or absence of tryptophan-2 docking allosterically alters the adhesive function of distal sites on the protein. This finding appears to reconcile the multidomain binding mechanism with mutagenesis studies, which suggested that W2 is the sole binding interface. The effects of the calcium site mutations indicate that structural perturbations cooperatively impact large regions of the protein structure. However, the influence of the calcium sites on cadherin structure and function depends on their location in the protein.


Assuntos
Caderinas/química , Cálcio/química , Animais , Sítios de Ligação , Caderinas/genética , Adesão Celular , Cães , Bicamadas Lipídicas/química , Microesferas , Mutação , Conformação Proteica , Proteína Estafilocócica A/química , Triptofano/química , Triptofano/genética
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