The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is a
member of the receptor tyrosine kinase family involved
in the regulation of cellular proliferation and differentiation.
Its juxtamembrane domain (JX), the region located
between the transmembrane and kinase domains,
plays important roles in receptor trafficking. Two sorting
signals, a PXXP motif and a 658LL659 motif, are responsible
for basolateral sorting in polarized epithelial
cells, and a 679LL680 motif targets the ligand-activated
receptor for lysosomal degradation. To understand the
regulation of these signals, we characterized the structural
properties of recombinant JX domain in aqueous
solution and in dodecylphosphocholine (DPC) detergent.
JX is inherently unstructured in aqueous solution,
albeit a nascent helix encompasses the lysosomal sorting
signal. In DPC micelles, structures derived from
NMR data showed three amphipathic, helical segments.
A large, internally inconsistent group of long range nuclear
Overhauser effects suggest a close proximity of the
helices, and the presence of significant conformational
averaging. Models were determined for the average JX
conformation using restraints representing the translational
restriction due to micelle-surface adsorption,
and the helix orientations were determined from
residual dipolar couplings. Two equivalent average
structural models were obtained that differ only in the
relative orientation between first and second helices.
In these models, the 658LL659 and 679LL680 motifs are
located in the first and second helices and face the
micelle surface, whereas the PXXP motif is located in a
flexible helix-connecting region. The data suggest that
the activity of these signals may be regulated by their
membrane association and restricted accessibility in the
intact receptor.
Revised: August 8, 2006 |
Published: June 24, 2005
Citation
Choowongkomon K., C.R. Carlin, and F.D. Sonnichsen. 2005.A Structural Model for the Membrane-Bound Form of the Juxtamembrane Domain of the Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor.Journal of Biological Chemistry 280, no. 25:24043-24052. doi:10.1074/jbc.m502698200