1. Academic Validation
  2. Force interacts with macromolecular structure in activation of TGF-β

Force interacts with macromolecular structure in activation of TGF-β

  • Nature. 2017 Feb 2;542(7639):55-59. doi: 10.1038/nature21035.
Xianchi Dong 1 Bo Zhao 1 Roxana E Iacob 2 Jianghai Zhu 1 Adem C Koksal 1 Chafen Lu 1 John R Engen 2 Timothy A Springer 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Children's Hospital Boston and Department of Biological Chemistry and Molecular Pharmacology, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
  • 2 Department of Chemistry and Chemical Biology, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Abstract

Integrins are adhesion receptors that transmit force across the plasma membrane between extracellular ligands and the actin Cytoskeleton. In activation of the transforming growth factor-β1 precursor (pro-TGF-β1), integrins bind to the prodomain, apply force, and release the TGF-β growth factor. However, we know little about how integrins bind macromolecular ligands in the extracellular matrix or transmit force to them. Here we show how Integrin αVβ6 binds pro-TGF-β1 in an orientation biologically relevant for force-dependent release of TGF-β from latency. The conformation of the prodomain integrin-binding motif differs in the presence and absence of Integrin binding; differences extend well outside the interface and illustrate how integrins can remodel extracellular matrix. Remodelled residues outside the interface stabilize the integrin-bound conformation, adopt a conformation similar to earlier-evolving family members, and show how macromolecular components outside the binding motif contribute to Integrin recognition. Regions in and outside the highly interdigitated interface stabilize a specific Integrin/pro-TGF-β orientation that defines the pathway through these macromolecules which actin-cytoskeleton-generated tensile force takes when applied through the Integrin β-subunit. Simulations of force-dependent activation of TGF-β demonstrate evolutionary specializations for force application through the TGF-β prodomain and through the β- and not α-subunit of the Integrin.

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