The formation of protein complexes between phosphorylated R-Smads and Smad4 is a central event in the TGF-beta signaling pathway. We have determined the crystal structure of two R-Smad/Smad4 complexes, Smad3/Smad4 to 2.5 angstroms, and Smad2/Smad4 to 2.7 angstroms. Both complexes are heterotrimers, comprising two phosphorylated R-Smad subunits and one Smad4 subunit, a finding that was corroborated by isothermal titration calorimetry and mutational studies. Preferential formation of the R-Smad/Smad4 heterotrimer over the R-Smad homotrimer is largely enthalpy driven, contributed by the unique presence of strong electrostatic interactions within the heterotrimeric interfaces. The study supports a common mechanism of Smad protein assembly in TGF-beta superfamily signaling.
Phosphorylation of Smad1 at the conserved carboxyl terminal SVS sequence activates BMP signaling. Here we report the crystal structure of the Smad1 MH2 domain in a conformation that reveals the structural effects of phosphorylation and a molecular mechanism for activation. Within a trimeric subunit assembly, the SVS sequence docks near two putative phosphoserine binding pockets of the neighboring molecule, in a position ready to interact upon phosphorylation. The MH2 domain undergoes concerted conformational changes upon activation, which signal Smad1 dissociation from the receptor kinase for subsequent heteromeric assembly with Smad4. Biochemical and modeling studies reveal unique favorable interactions within the Smad1/Smad4 heteromeric interface, providing a structural basis for their association in signaling.
Smad proteins mediate the transforming growth factor beta responses. C-terminal phosphorylation of R-Smads leads to the recruitment of Smad4 and the formation of active signaling complexes. We investigated the mechanism of phosphorylation-induced Smad complex formation with an activating pseudo-phosphorylated Smad3. Pseudo-phosphorylated Smad3 has a greater propensity to homotrimerize, and recruits Smad4 to form a heterotrimer containing two Smad3 and one Smad4. The trimeric interaction is mediated through conserved interfaces to which tumorigenic mutations map. Furthermore, a conserved Arg residue within the L3 loop, located near the C-terminal phosphorylation sites of the neighboring subunit, is essential for trimerization. We propose that the phosphorylated C-terminal residues interact with the L3 loop of the neighboring subunit to stabilize the trimer interaction.
SMAD proteins are known to oligomerize and hetero-associate during their activation and translocation to the nucleus for transcriptional control. Analytical ultracentrifuge studies on Smad3 and Smad4 protein constructs are presented to clarify the model of homo- and hetero-oligomerization and the role of phosphorylation in the activation process. These constructs all exhibit a tendency to form disulfide cross-linked aggregates, primarily dimers, and a strong reducing agent, TCEP, was found to be required to determine the best estimates for reversible association models and equilibrium constants. A Smad4 construct, S4AF, consisting of the middle linker (L) domain and the C-terminal (C) domain, is shown to be a monomer, while a Smad3 construct, S3LC, consisting of the LC domains, is shown to form a trimer with an affinity K(3) = (1.2-3.1) x 10(9) M(-2). A Smad3 construct that mimics phosphorylation at the C-terminal target sequence, S3LC(3E), has 17--35-fold enhanced ability to form trimer over that of the wild-type construct, S3LC. S4AF associates with either S3LC or S3LC(3E) to form a hetero-trimer. In each case, the hetero-trimer is favored over the formation of the homo-trimer. Despite high sequence homology between Smad3 and Smad4, a chimeric Smad4 construct with an engineered Smad3 C-terminal pseudo-phosphorylation sequence, S4AF(3E), shows no tendency to form trimer. This suggests a Smad4-specific sequence insert inhibits homo-trimer formation, or other domains or sequences in S3LC are required in addition to the target sequence to mediate the formation of trimer. These results represent a direct molecular measure of the importance of hetero-trimerization and phosphorylation in the TGF-beta-activated Smad protein signal transduction process.
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