Adam meets Eph: an ADAM substrate recognition module acts as a molecular switch for ephrin cleavage in trans.

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Citation

Janes PW, Saha N, Barton WA, Kolev MV, Wimmer-Kleikamp SH, Nievergall E, Blobel CP, Himanen JP, Lackmann M, Nikolov DB

Adam meets Eph: an ADAM substrate recognition module acts as a molecular switch for ephrin cleavage in trans.

Cell. 2005 Oct 21;123(2):291-304.

PubMed ID
16239146 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The Eph family of receptor tyrosine kinases and their ephrin ligands are mediators of cell-cell communication. Cleavage of ephrin-A2 by the ADAM10 membrane metalloprotease enables contact repulsion between Eph- and ephrin-expressing cells. How ADAM10 interacts with ephrins in a regulated manner to cleave only Eph bound ephrin molecules remains unclear. The structure of ADAM10 disintegrin and cysteine-rich domains and the functional studies presented here define an essential substrate-recognition module for functional interaction of ADAM10 with the ephrin-A5/EphA3 complex. While ADAM10 constitutively associates with EphA3, the formation of a functional EphA3/ephrin-A5 complex creates a new molecular recognition motif for the ADAM10 cysteine-rich domain that positions the proteinase domain for effective ephrin-A5 cleavage. Surprisingly, the cleavage occurs in trans, with ADAM10 and its substrate being on the membranes of opposing cells. Our data suggest a simple mechanism for regulating ADAM10-mediated ephrin proteolysis, which ensures that only Eph bound ephrins are recognized and cleaved.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Disintegrin and metalloproteinase domain-containing protein 10O14672Details
Ephrin type-A receptor 3P29320Details