Issue June 2004

category image Volume 21
No. 6 (p. 725-854)
June 2004
ISSN 0739-110

Aqueous and Micelle-bound Structural Characterization of the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Juxtamembrane Domain Containing Basolateral Sorting Motifs (p. 813-826)

The EGF receptor is the prototype for four highly related receptors constituting the ErbB family. The EGF receptor is normally targeted to the basolateral membrane in polarized epithelial cells, where it relays information from underlying tissues. Two basolateral sorting signals have been mapped to the cytoplasmic juxtamembrane region of the receptor, a dominant signal comprised of a polyproline core (667-PXXP) and a preceding basic residue (Arg662), and a consensus leucine-based signal (658-LL) responsible for residual sorting when the 667-PXXP signal is absent or defective. The goal of this study was to define the structure of these signals, and gain some insights into how these structures might be regulated by cellular microenvironment. Structural information was acquired for two peptides corresponding to EGF receptor residues Arg645 and Ala674 in aqueous solution or in the presence of membrane-mimicking dodecylphosphocholine micelles, using a variety of NMR and CD spectroscopic methods. Chemical shift data indicate that the 667-PXXP signal does not bind to the micelles and is in random coil state in both aqueous solution and a micellar environment, raising the possibility that 667-PXXP switches to an ordered structure during interaction with the basolateral sorting machinery. In contrast, the adjacent region including 658-LL does bind to micelles mediated by a highly positively charged region located between Arg645 and Arg656. The micelle-bound region also includes Thr654, a known substrate for PKC. This suggests a distinct mode of regulation for this signal involving membrane association and/or phosphorylation.

Key words: Basolateral sorting signal, EGF receptor, NMR, Membrane association, Structure, DPC micelles.

Kiattawee Choowongkomon1,2
Michael E. Hoberta
Cheng He1 Cathleen R. Carlin1,2,3
Frank D. Sonnichsen1,2,4*

1Department of Physiology and Biophysics
Case Western Reserve University
Cleveland, Ohio 44106
2The Rainbow Center for Childhood PKD
Rainbow Babies & Children?s Hospital
Cleveland, Ohio 44106
3Case Western Reserve
University Cancer Center
4Cleveland Center for Structural Biology

aCurrent Address:
Department of Pathology
University of Chicago
5841 S. Maryland Ave.
Chicago, IL 60637
*fds@case.edu

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