1995
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.92.22.10172
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A cooperative model for receptor recognition and cell adhesion: evidence from the molecular packing in the 1.6-A crystal structure of the pheromone Er-1 from the ciliated protozoan Euplotes raikovi.

Abstract: The crystal structure of the pheromone Er-I from the unicellular eukaryotic organism Euplotes raikovi was determined at 1.6 A resolution and refined to a crystallographic R factor of 19.9%. In the tightly packed crystal, two extensive intermolecular helix-helix interactions arrange the Er-i molecules into layers. Since the putative receptor of the pheromone is a membrane-bound protein, whose extracellular C-terminal domain is identical in amino acid sequence to the soluble pheromone, the interactions found in … Show more

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Cited by 56 publications
(67 citation statements)
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References 24 publications
(31 reference statements)
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“…We thus do not address the question of comparing absolute values of D and B in the NMR structure and the crystal structure. In some ways (3) corresponds to the 'inverse' of previous approaches to derive 'pseudo-B values' from NMR displacements in attempts to obtain improved models for molecular replacement in crystal structure determinations (Weiss et al, 1995;Wilmanns & Nilges, 1996). Global r.m.s.d.…”
Section: Structure Validation and Data Depositionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We thus do not address the question of comparing absolute values of D and B in the NMR structure and the crystal structure. In some ways (3) corresponds to the 'inverse' of previous approaches to derive 'pseudo-B values' from NMR displacements in attempts to obtain improved models for molecular replacement in crystal structure determinations (Weiss et al, 1995;Wilmanns & Nilges, 1996). Global r.m.s.d.…”
Section: Structure Validation and Data Depositionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In particular, the second helix of attractin, containing the IEECKTS motif, is quite similar to the third helix of Er-11 (4). This third helix of the Euplotes pheromones is involved in receptor recognition (25,26). Although Euplotes pheromone sequences differ significantly, sharing only six cysteines and an N-terminal aspartic acid, all have the same compact ''pyramid'' 3D structure of three ␣-helices (25)(26)(27)(28)(29).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 89%
“…This third helix of the Euplotes pheromones is involved in receptor recognition (25,26). Although Euplotes pheromone sequences differ significantly, sharing only six cysteines and an N-terminal aspartic acid, all have the same compact ''pyramid'' 3D structure of three ␣-helices (25)(26)(27)(28)(29). The pheromone Er-1 can bind to the mammalian receptor for interleukin-2 (30), raising the possibility that water-borne pheromones may be ancestors of cytokines in higher organisms.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This hypothesis was suggested earlier by the finding that, like autocrine pheromone binding, antibodies binding to p15 promote cell growth (31). Considering the similarity of the p15 ectodomain and Er-1 (20,24), it is a short extrapolation to propose the hetero-oligomerization of p15 and Er-1 from the crystal structural data of Er-1, which show homo-oligomerization (33). In addition, the Er-1 molecules pack in the crystal according to a pattern of cooperative protein-protein oligomerization, which is imposed by the capacity to interact with one another by means of all their surfaces provided by their three-helix bundle conformation.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The three-helix configuration of the p15 ectodomain was extrapolated from the equivalence of the primary structure of this domain with Er-1 (20). Clustering of the p15/Er-1 complexes was based on a pattern of cooperative association determined for the Er-1 molecules in the crystal structure (33). This pattern requires that every molecule utilizes all three of its helices to associate with two other molecules: one association (dimer 1) involves helix-1/helix-1 (yellow/ yellow) and helix-2/helix-2 (red/red) interactions, and the second association (dimer 2) involves helix-3/helix-3 (green/green) interactions.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%