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A New Method to Study Heterodimerization of Membrane Proteins and Its Application to Fibroblast Growth Factor Receptors
- Source :
- The Journal of biological chemistry. 292(4)
- Publication Year :
- 2016
-
Abstract
- The activity of receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) is controlled through their lateral association in the plasma membrane. RTKs are believed to form both homodimers and heterodimers, and the different dimers are believed to play unique roles in cell signaling. However, RTK heterodimers remain poorly characterized, as compared with homodimers, because of limitations in current experimental methods. Here, we develop a FRET-based methodology to assess the thermodynamics of hetero-interactions in the plasma membrane. To demonstrate the utility of the methodology, we use it to study the hetero-interactions between three fibroblast growth factor receptors-FGFR1, FGFR2, and FGFR3-in the absence of ligand. Our results show that all possible FGFR heterodimers form, suggesting that the biological roles of FGFR heterodimers may be as significant as the homodimer roles. We further investigate the effect of two pathogenic point mutations in FGFR3 (A391E and G380R) on heterodimerization. We show that each of these mutations stabilize most of the heterodimers, with the largest effects observed for FGFR3 wild-type/mutant heterodimers. We thus demonstrate that the methodology presented here can yield new knowledge about RTK interactions and can further our understanding of signal transduction across the plasma membrane.
- Subjects :
- 0301 basic medicine
Mutation, Missense
CHO Cells
Biology
Fibroblast growth factor
Biochemistry
Receptor tyrosine kinase
Protein–protein interaction
Cell membrane
03 medical and health sciences
Cricetulus
Cricetinae
medicine
Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer
Animals
Humans
Receptor, Fibroblast Growth Factor, Type 3
Receptor, Fibroblast Growth Factor, Type 1
Receptor, Fibroblast Growth Factor, Type 2
Molecular Biology
030102 biochemistry & molecular biology
Cell Membrane
Methods and Resources
Cell Biology
Ligand (biochemistry)
Cell biology
030104 developmental biology
medicine.anatomical_structure
Membrane protein
Amino Acid Substitution
Fibroblast growth factor receptor
biology.protein
Signal transduction
Protein Multimerization
Signal Transduction
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1083351X
- Volume :
- 292
- Issue :
- 4
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- The Journal of biological chemistry
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....d5bda94fed91b2f3b6de3f918a1ab535