T-cadherin structures reveal a novel adhesive binding mechanism

C Ciatto, F Bahna, N Zampieri… - Nature structural & …, 2010 - nature.com
C Ciatto, F Bahna, N Zampieri, HC VanSteenhouse, PS Katsamba, G Ahlsen, OJ Harrison
Nature structural & molecular biology, 2010nature.com
Vertebrate genomes encode 19 classical cadherins and about 100 nonclassical cadherins.
Adhesion by classical cadherins depends on binding interactions in their N-terminal EC1
domains, which swap N-terminal β-strands between partner molecules from apposing cells.
However, strand-swapping sequence signatures are absent from nonclassical cadherins,
raising the question of how these proteins function in adhesion. Here, we show that T-
cadherin, a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored cadherin, forms dimers through an …
Abstract
Vertebrate genomes encode 19 classical cadherins and about 100 nonclassical cadherins. Adhesion by classical cadherins depends on binding interactions in their N-terminal EC1 domains, which swap N-terminal β-strands between partner molecules from apposing cells. However, strand-swapping sequence signatures are absent from nonclassical cadherins, raising the question of how these proteins function in adhesion. Here, we show that T-cadherin, a glycosylphosphatidylinositol (GPI)-anchored cadherin, forms dimers through an alternative nonswapped interface near the EC1-EC2 calcium-binding sites. Mutations within this interface ablate the adhesive capacity of T-cadherin. These nonadhesive T-cadherin mutants also lose the ability to regulate neurite outgrowth from T-cadherin–expressing neurons. Our findings reveal the likely molecular architecture of the T-cadherin homophilic interface and its requirement for axon outgrowth regulation. The adhesive binding mode used by T-cadherin may also be used by other nonclassical cadherins.
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