Ligand discrimination in signaling through an ErbB4 receptor homodimer.

Article Details

Citation

Sweeney C, Lai C, Riese DJ 2nd, Diamonti AJ, Cantley LC, Carraway KL 3rd

Ligand discrimination in signaling through an ErbB4 receptor homodimer.

J Biol Chem. 2000 Jun 30;275(26):19803-7.

PubMed ID
10867024 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like family of growth factors elicits cellular responses by stimulating the dimerization, autophosphorylation, and tyrosine kinase activities of the ErbB family of receptor tyrosine kinases. Although several different EGF-like ligands are capable of binding to a single ErbB family member, it is generally thought that the biological and biochemical responses of a single receptor dimer to different ligands are indistinguishable. To test whether an ErbB receptor dimer is capable of discriminating among ligands we have examined the effect of four EGF-like growth factors on signaling through the ErbB4 receptor homodimer in CEM/HER4 cells, a transfected human T cell line ectopically expressing ErbB4 in an ErbB-null background. Despite stimulating similar levels of gross receptor tyrosine phosphorylation, the EGF-like growth factors betacellulin, neuregulin-1beta, neuregulin-2beta, and neuregulin-3 exhibited different biological potencies in a cellular growth assay. Moreover, the different ligands induced different patterns of recruitment of intracellular signaling proteins to the activated receptor and induced differential usage of intracellular kinase signaling cascades. Finally, two-dimensional phosphopeptide mapping of ligand-stimulated ErbB4 revealed that the different growth factors induce different patterns of receptor tyrosine phosphorylation. These results indicate that ErbB4 activation by growth factors is not generic and suggest that individual ErbB receptors can discriminate between different EGF-like ligands within the context of a single receptor dimer. More generally, our observations significantly modify our understanding of signaling through receptor tyrosine kinases and point to a number of possible models for ligand-mediated signal diversification.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Polypeptides
NameUniProt ID
Growth factor receptor-bound protein 2P62993Details
Phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase regulatory subunit alphaP27986Details
Receptor tyrosine-protein kinase erbB-4Q15303Details