4.8 Article

Structures of a platelet-derived growth factor/propeptide complex and a platelet-derived growth factor/receptor complex

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1000806107

Keywords

crystallography; receptor tyrosine kinase; signal transduction

Funding

  1. Brain Tumor Society
  2. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [1R01GM078055]
  3. R.H. Lurie Comprehensive Cancer Center of Northwestern University

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Platelet-derived growth factors (PDGFs) and their receptors (PDGFRs) are prototypic growth factors and receptor tyrosine kinases which have critical functions in development. We show that PDGFs share a conserved region in their prodomain sequences which can remain noncovalently associated with the mature cystine-knot growth factor domain after processing. The structure of the PDGF-A/propeptide complex reveals this conserved, hydrophobic association mode. We also present the structure of the complex between PDGF-B and the first three Ig domains of PDGFR beta, showing that two PDGF-B protomers clamp PDGFR beta at their dimerization seam. The PDGF-B:PDGFR beta interface is predominantly hydrophobic, and PDGFRs and the PDGF propeptides occupy overlapping positions on mature PDGFs, rationalizing the need of propeptides by PDGFs to cover functionally important hydrophobic surfaces during secretion. A large-scale structural organization and rearrangement is observed for PDGF-B upon receptor binding, in which the PDGF-B L1 loop, disordered in the structure of the free form, adopts a highly specific conformation to form hydrophobic interactions with the third Ig domain of PDGFR beta. Calorimetric data also shows that the membrane-proximal homotypic PDGFR alpha interaction, albeit required for activation, contributes negatively to ligand binding. The structural and biochemical data together offer insights into PDGF-PDGFR signaling, as well as strategies for PDGF-antagonism.

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