A two-site flexible clamp mechanism for RET-GDNF-GFRα1 assembly reveals both conformational adaptation and strict geometric spacing

Autor: Phillip P. Knowles, Aaron J. Borg, Agata Nawrotek, Francesca M. Houghton, Neil Q. McDonald, Andrea Nans, Annabel Borg, Christopher Earl, Sarah E. Adams, Svend Kjaer, Kerry M. Goodman, David Briggs, Pauline B. McIntosh, Andrew Purkiss
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
DOI: 10.1101/2020.09.13.286047
Popis: RET receptor tyrosine kinase plays vital developmental and neuroprotective roles in metazoans. GDNF family ligands (GFLs) when bound to cognate GFRα co-receptors recognise and activate RET stimulating its cytoplasmic kinase function. The principles for RET ligand-co-receptor recognition are incompletely understood. Here we report a crystal structure of the cadherin-like module (CLD1-4) from zebrafish RET revealing interdomain flexibility between CLD2-CLD3. Comparison with a cryo-EM structure of a ligand-engaged zebrafish RETECD-GDNF-GFRα1 complex indicates conformational changes within a clade-specific CLD3 loop adjacent to co-receptor. Our observations indicate RET is a molecular clamp with a flexible calcium-dependent arm that adapts to different GFRα co-receptors, while its rigid arm recognises a GFL dimer to align both membrane-proximal cysteine-rich domains. We also visualise linear arrays of RETECD-GDNF-GFRα1 suggesting a conserved contact stabilises higher-order species. Our study reveals ligand-co-receptor recognition by RET involves both receptor plasticity and strict spacing of receptor dimers by GFL ligands.HighlightsCrystal structure of zebrafish RET cadherin-like module reveals conformational flexibility at the calcium-dependent CLD2-CLD3 interfaceComparison of X-ray and cryo-EM structures indicate conformational differences between unliganded and liganded RET involving a clade-specific CLD3 loopStrict spatial separation of RETECD C-termini is imposed by each cysteine-rich domain interaction with GFL dimerDifferences in co-receptor engagement and higher-order ligand-bound RET complexes indicate potentially divergent signalling mechanisms
Databáze: OpenAIRE