| Literature DB >> 14660665 |
Fiona M Smith1, Christopher Vearing, Martin Lackmann, Herbert Treutlein, Juha Himanen, Ke Chen, Allan Saul, Dimitar Nikolov, Andrew W Boyd.
Abstract
The EphA3 receptor tyrosine kinase preferentially binds ephrin-A5, a member of the corresponding subfamily of membrane-associated ligands. Their interaction regulates critical cell communication functions in normal development and may play a role in neoplasia. Here we describe a random mutagenesis approach, which we employed to study the molecular determinants of the EphA3/ephrin-A5 recognition. Selection and functional characterization of EphA3 point mutants with impaired ephrin-A5 binding from a yeast expression library defined three EphA3 surface areas that are essential for the EphA3/ephrin-A5 interaction. Two of these map to regions identified previously in the crystal structure of the homologous EphB2-ephrin-B2 complex as potential ligand/receptor interfaces. In addition, we identify a third EphA3/ephrin-A5 interface that falls outside the structurally characterized interaction domains. Functional analysis of EphA3 mutants reveals that all three Eph/ephrin contact areas are essential for the assembly of signaling-competent, oligomeric receptor-ligand complexes.Entities:
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Year: 2003 PMID: 14660665 DOI: 10.1074/jbc.M309326200
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Biol Chem ISSN: 0021-9258 Impact factor: 5.157