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Bivalence of EGF-like ligands drives the ErbB signaling network

  • Eldad Tzahar
  • , Ronit Pinkas-Kramarski
  • , James D. Moyer
  • , Leah N. Klapper
  • , Iris Alroy
  • , Gil Levkowitz
  • , Maya Shelly
  • , Sivan Henis
  • , Miriam Eisenstein
  • , Barry J. Ratzkin
  • , Michael Sela
  • , Glenn C. Andrews
  • , Yosef Yarden
  • Weizmann Institute of Science
  • Pfizer
  • Amgen Incorporated

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

212 Scopus citations

Abstract

Signaling by epidermal growth factor (EGF)-like ligands is mediated by an interactive network of four ErbB receptor tyrosine kinases, whose mechanism of ligand-induced dimerization is unknown. We contrasted two existing models: a conformation-driven activation of a receptor-intrinsic dimerization site and a ligand bivalence model. Analysis of a Neu differentiation factor (NDF)-induced heterodimer between ErbB-3 and ErbB-2 favors a bivalence model; the ligand simultaneously binds both ErbB-3 and ErbB-2, but, due to low-affinity of the second binding event, ligand bivalence drives dimerization only when the receptors are membrane anchored. Results obtained with a chimera and isoforms of NDF/neuregulin predict that each terminus of the ligand molecule contains a distinct binding site. The C-terminal low-affinity site has broad specificity, but it prefers interaction with ErbB-2, an oncogenic protein acting as a promiscuous low-affinity subunit of the three primary receptors. Thus, ligand bivalence enables signal diversification through selective recruitment of homo- and heterodimers of ErbB receptors, and it may explain oncogenicity of erbB-2/HER2.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4938-4950
Number of pages13
JournalEMBO Journal
Volume16
Issue number16
DOIs
StatePublished - Aug 15 1997

Keywords

  • Growth factor
  • Neuregulin
  • Oncogene
  • Signal transduction
  • Tyrosine kinase

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