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1.
We have investigated the role of the C-terminal of the alpha-subunit in the insulin receptor family by characterizing chimeric mini-receptor constructs comprising the first three domains (468 amino acids) of insulin receptor (IR) or insulin-like growth factor I receptor (IGFIR) combined with C-terminal domain from either insulin receptor (IR) (residues 704-719), IGFIR, or insulin receptor-related receptor (IRRR). The constructs were stably expressed in baby hamster kidney cells and purified, and binding affinities were determined for insulin, IGFI, and a single chain insulin/IGFI hybrid. The C-terminal domain of IRRR was found to abolish binding in IR and IGFIR context, whereas other constructs bound ligands. The two constructs with first three domains of the IR demonstrated low specificity for ligands, all affinities ranging from 3.0 to 15 nM. In contrast, the constructs with the first three domains of the IGFIR had high specificity, the affinity of the novel minimized IGFIR for IGFI was 1.5 nM, whereas the affinity for insulin was more than 3000 nM. When swapping the C-terminal domains in either receptor context only minor changes were observed in affinities (<3-fold), demonstrating that the carboxyl-terminal of IR and IGFIR alpha-subunits are interchangeable and suggesting that this domain is part of the common binding site.  相似文献   

2.
We have previously shown that a minimized insulin receptor (IR) consisting of the first 468 amino acids of the insulin receptor fused to 16 amino acids from the C terminus of the alpha-subunit (CT domain) bound insulin with nanomolar affinity (Kristensen, C., Wiberg, F. C., Sch?ffer, L., and Andersen, A. S. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 17780-17786). In the present study, we show that a smaller construct that has the first 308 residues fused to the CT domain also binds insulin. Insulin receptor fragments consisting of the first 468 or 308 residues did not bind insulin. However, when these fragments were mixed with a synthetic peptide corresponding to the CT domain, insulin binding was detectable. At concentrations of 10 microm CT peptide, insulin binding was fully reconstituted yielding apparent affinities of 9-11 nm. To further investigate the minimum requirement for the length of the N terminus of IR, we tested smaller receptor fragments for insulin binding in the presence of the CT peptide and found that a fragment consisting of the first 255 amino acids of IR was able to fully reconstitute the insulin binding site, yielding an apparent affinity of 11 +/- 4 nm for insulin.  相似文献   

3.
The IR (insulin receptor) and IGFR (type I insulin-like growth factor receptor) are found as homodimers, but the respective pro-receptors can also heterodimerize to form insulin-IGF hybrid receptors. There are conflicting data on the ligand affinity of hybrids, and especially on the influence of different IR isoforms. To investigate further the contribution of individual ligand binding epitopes to affinity and specificity in the IR/IGFR family, we generated hybrids incorporating both IR isoforms (A and B) and IR/IGFR domain-swap chimaeras, by ectopic co-expression of receptor constructs in Chinese hamster ovary cells, and studied ligand binding using both radioligand competition and bioluminescence resonance energy transfer assays. We found that IR-A-IGFR and IR-B-IGFR hybrids bound insulin with similar relatively low affinity, which was intermediate between that of homodimeric IR and homodimeric IGFR. However, both IR-A-IGFR and IR-B-IGFR hybrids bound IGF-I and IGF-II with high affinity, at a level comparable with homodimeric IGFR. Incorporation of a significant fraction of either IR-A or IR-B into hybrids resulted in abrogation of insulin- but not IGF-I-stimulated autophosphorylation. We conclude that the sequence of 12 amino acids encoded by exon 11 of the IR gene has little or no effect on ligand binding and activation of IR-IGFR hybrids, and that hybrid receptors bind IGFs but not insulin at physiological concentrations regardless of the IR isoform they contained. To reconstitute high affinity insulin binding within a hybrid receptor, chimaeras in which the IGFR L1 or L2 domains had been replaced by equivalent IR domains were co-expressed with full-length IR-A or IR-B. In the context of an IR-A-IGFR hybrid, replacement of IR residues 325-524 (containing the L2 domain and part of the first fibronectin domain) with the corresponding IGFR sequence increased the affinity for insulin by 20-fold. We conclude that the L2 and/or first fibronectin domains of IR contribute in trans with the L1 domain to create a high affinity insulin-binding site within a dimeric receptor.  相似文献   

4.
Adhesion of pathogenic Leptospira spp. to mammalian cells is mediated by their adhesins interacting with host cell receptors. In a previous study, we have identified two potential fibronectin (Fn) binding sites in central variable region (LigBCen) and C-terminal variable region (LigBCtv) of LigB, an adhesin of pathogenic Leptospira spp. In this study, we have further localized the Fn-binding site on LigBCen and found a domain of LigB (LigBCen2) (amino acids 1014-1165) strongly bound to Fn. LigBCen2 bound to a 70kDa domain of Fn including N-terminal domain (NTD) and gelatin binding domain (GBD), but with a higher binding affinity to NTD (K(d)=272nM) than to GBD (K(d)=1200nM). Except Fn, LigBCen2 also bound laminin and fibrinogen. LigBCen2 could bind MDCK cells, and blocked the binding of Leptospira on MDCK cells by 45%. These results suggest that LigBCen2 contributed to high affinity binding on NTD or GBD of Fn, laminin, and fibrinogen and mediated Leptospira binding on host cells.  相似文献   

5.
Chimeric insulin/insulin-like growth factor-1 receptors and insulin receptor alpha-subunit point mutants were characterized with respect to their binding properties for insulin and insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1) and their ability to translate ligand interaction into tyrosine kinase activation in intact cells. We found that replacement of the amino-terminal 137 amino acids of the insulin receptor (IR) with the corresponding 131 amino acids of the IGF-1 receptor (IGF-1R) resulted in loss of affinity for both ligands. Further replacement of the adjacent cysteine region with IGF-1R sequences fully reconstituted affinity for IGF-1, but only marginally for insulin. Unexpectedly, replacement of the IR cysteine-rich domain alone by IGF-1R sequences created a high affinity receptor for both insulin and IGF-1. The binding characteristics of all receptor chimeras reflected the potential of both ligands to regulate the receptor tyrosine kinase activity in intact cells. Our chimeric receptor data, in conjunction with IR amino-terminal domain point mutants, strongly suggest major contributions of structural determinants in both amino- and carboxyl-terminal IR alpha-subunit regions for the formation of the insulin-binding pocket, whereas, surprisingly, the residues defining IGF-1 binding are present predominantly in the cysteine-rich domain of the IGF-1R.  相似文献   

6.
The insulin receptor (IR) is a dimeric receptor, and its activation is thought to involve cross-linking between monomers initiated by binding of a single insulin molecule to separate epitopes on each monomer. We have previously shown that a minimized insulin receptor consisting of the first three domains of the human IR fused to 16 amino acids from the C-terminal of the alpha-subunit was monomeric and bound insulin with nanomolar affinity (Kristensen, C., Wiberg, F. C., Sch?ffer, L., and Andersen, A. S. (1998) J. Biol. Chem. 273, 17780-17786). To investigate the insulin binding properties of dimerized alpha-subunits, we have reintroduced the domains containing alpha-alpha disulfide bonds into this minireceptor. When inserting either the first fibronectin type III domain or the full-length sequence of exon 10, the receptor fragments were predominantly secreted as disulfide-linked dimers that both had nanomolar affinity for insulin, similar to the affinity found for the minireceptor. However, when both these domains were included we obtained a soluble dimeric receptor that bound insulin with 1000-fold higher affinity (4-8 pm) similar to what was obtained for the solubilized holoreceptor (14-24 pm). Moreover, dissociation of labeled insulin from this receptor was accelerated in the presence of unlabeled insulin, demonstrating another characteristic feature of the holoreceptor. This is the first direct demonstration showing that the alpha-subunit of IR contains all the epitopes required for binding insulin with full holoreceptor affinity.  相似文献   

7.
Binding of the group A streptococcus (GAS) to respiratory epithelium is mediated by the fibronectin (Fn)-binding adhesin, protein F1. Previous studies have suggested that certain GAS strains express Fn-binding proteins that are different from protein F1. In this study, we have cloned, sequenced, and characterized a gene ( prtF2 ) from GAS strain 100076 encoding a novel Fn-binding protein, termed protein F2. Insertional inactivation of prtF2 in strain 100076 abolishes its high-affinity Fn binding. prtF2 -related genes exist in most GAS strains that lack prtF1 (encoding protein F1) but bind Fn with high affinity. These observations suggest that protein F2 is a major Fn-binding protein in GAS. Protein F2 is highly homologous to Fn-binding proteins from Streptococcus dysgalactiae and Strep-tococcus equisimilis , particularly in its carboxy-terminal portion. Two domains are responsible for Fn binding by protein F2. One domain (FBRD) consists of three consecutive repeats, whereas the other domain (UFBD) resides on a non-repeated stretch of approximately 100 amino acids and is located 100 amino acids amino-terminal of FBRD. Each of these domains is capable of binding Fn when expressed as a separate protein. In strain 100076, protein F2 activity is regulated in response to alterations in the concentration of atmospheric oxygen.  相似文献   

8.
The insulin receptor is a homodimer composed of two alphabeta half receptors. Scanning mutagenesis studies have identified key residues important for insulin binding in the L1 domain (amino acids 1-150) and C-terminal region (amino acids 704-719) of the alpha subunit. However, it has not been shown whether insulin interacts with these two sites within the same alpha chain or whether it cross-links a site from each alpha subunit in the dimer to achieve high affinity binding. Here we have tested the contralateral binding mechanism by analyzing truncated insulin receptor dimers (midi-hIRs) that contain complementary mutations in each alpha subunit. Midi-hIRs containing Ala(14), Ala(64), or Gly(714) mutations were fused with Myc or FLAG epitopes at the C terminus and were expressed separately by transient transfection. Immunoblots showed that R14A+FLAG, F64A+FLAG, and F714G+Myc mutant midi-hIRs were expressed in the medium but insulin binding activity was not detected. However, after co-transfection with R14A+FLAG/F714G+Myc or F64A+FLAG/F714G+Myc, hybrid dimers were obtained with a marked increase in insulin binding activity. Competitive displacement assays revealed that the hybrid mutant receptors bound insulin with the same affinity as wild type and also displayed curvilinear Scatchard plots. In addition, when hybrid mutant midi-hIR was covalently cross-linked with (125)I(A14)-insulin and reduced, radiolabeled monomer was immunoprecipitated only with anti-FLAG, demonstrating that insulin was bound asymmetrically. These results demonstrate that a single insulin molecule can contact both alpha subunits in the insulin receptor dimer during high affinity binding and this property may be an important feature for receptor signaling.  相似文献   

9.
The 10th type III domain of human fibronectin (Fn3) has been validated as an effective scaffold for molecular recognition. In the current work, it was desired to improve the robustness of selection of stable, high-affinity Fn3 domains. A yeast surface display library of Fn3 was created in which three solvent-exposed loops were diversified in terms of amino acid composition and loop length. The library was screened by fluorescence-activated cell sorting to isolate binders to lysozyme. An affinity maturation scheme was developed to rapidly and broadly diversify populations of clones by random mutagenesis as well as homologous recombination-driven shuffling of mutagenized loops. The novel library and affinity maturation scheme combined to yield stable, monomeric Fn3 domains with 3 pM affinity for lysozyme. A secondary affinity maturation identified a stable 1.1 pM binder, the highest affinity yet reported for an Fn3 domain. In addition to extension of the affinity limit for this scaffold, the results demonstrate the ability to achieve high-affinity binding while preserving stability and the monomeric state. This library design and affinity maturation scheme is highly efficient, utilizing an initial diversity of 2 × 107 clones and screening only 1 × 108 mutants (totaled over all affinity maturation libraries). Analysis of intermediate populations revealed that loop length diversity, loop shuffling, and recursive mutagenesis of diverse populations are all critical components.  相似文献   

10.
Streptococcus pyogenes binds to the extracellular matrix (ECM) and a variety of host cells and tissues, causing diverse human diseases. Protein F, a S.pyogenes adhesin that binds fibronectin (Fn), contains two binding domains. A repeated domain (RD2) and an additional domain (UR), located immediately N-terminal to RD2. Both domains are required for maximal Fn binding. In this study, we characterize RD2 and UR precisely and compare their functions and binding sites in Fn. The minimal functional unit of RD2 is of 44 amino acids, with contributions from two adjacent RD2 repeats flanked by a novel 'MGGQSES' motif. RD2 binds to the N-terminal fibrin binding domain of Fn. UR contains 49 amino acids, of which six are from the first repeat of RD2. It binds to Fn with higher affinity than RD2, and recognizes a larger fragment that contains fibrin and collagen binding domains. Expression of UR and RD2 independently on the surface-exposed region of unrelated streptococcal protein demonstrates that both mediate adherence of the bacteria to the ECM. We describe here a mechanism of adherence of a pathogen that involves two pairs of sites located on a single adhesin molecule and directed at the same host receptor.  相似文献   

11.
Protein F1 is a surface protein of Streptococcus pyogenes that mediates high affinity binding to fibronectin (Fn) and facilitates S. pyogenes adherence and penetration into cells. The smallest portion of F1 known to retain the full binding potential of the intact protein is a stretch of 49 amino acids known as the functional upstream domain (FUD). Synthetic and recombinant versions of FUD were labeled with fluorescein isothiocyanate and used in fluorescence anisotropy experiments. These probes bound to Fn or the 70-kDa fragment of Fn with dissociation constants of 8-30 nm. Removal of the N-terminal seven residues of FUD did not cause a change in binding affinity. Further N- or C-terminal truncations resulted in complete loss of binding activity. Analysis of recombinant versions of the 70-kDa fragment that lacked one or several type I modules indicates that residues 1-7 of the 49-mer bind to type I modules I1 and I2 of the 27-kDa subfragment and the C-terminal residues bind to modules I4 and I5. Fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled 49-mer also bound with lower affinity to large Fn fragments that lack the five type I modules of the 27-kDa fragment but contain the other seven type 1 modules of Fn. These results indicate that, although FUD has a general affinity for type I modules, high affinity binding of FUD to Fn is mediated by specific interactions with N-terminal type I modules.  相似文献   

12.
We have previously shown, using truncated soluble recombinant receptors, that substituting the 62 N-terminal amino acids of the alpha subunit from the insulin-like growth factor I receptor (IGFIR) with the corresponding 68 amino acids from the insulin receptor (IR) results in a chimeric receptor with an approximately 200-fold increase in affinity for insulin and only a 5-fold decrease in insulin-like growth factor I (IGFI) affinity (Kjeldsen, T., Andersen, A. S., Wiberg, F. C., Rasmussen, J. S., Sch?ffer, L., Balschmidt, P., M?ller, K. B., and M?ller, N. P. H. (1991) Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 88, 4404-4408). We demonstrate that these 68 N-terminal amino acids of the IR also confer insulin affinity on the intact IGFI holoreceptor both in the membrane-bound state and when solubilized by Triton X-100. Furthermore, this domain can be subdivided into two regions (amino acids 1-27 and 28-68 of the IR alpha subunit) that, when replacing the corresponding IGFIR sequences, increases the insulin affinity of truncated soluble receptor chimeras 8- and 20-fold, respectively, with only minor effects on the IGFI affinity. Within the latter of these two regions, we found that amino acids 38-68 of the IR, representing 13 amino acid differences from IGFIR, confer the same 20-fold increase in insulin affinity on the IGFIR. Finally, the amino acids from position 42 to 50 are not responsible for this increase in insulin affinity. We thus propose that at least two determinants within the 68 N-terminal amino acids of the insulin receptor are involved in defining the ligand specificity of the insulin receptor, and that one or a combination of the remaining seven amino acid differences between position 38 and 68 are involved in conferring insulin affinity on the insulin receptor.  相似文献   

13.
The insulin receptor (IR), the insulin-like growth factor 1 receptor (IGF1R) and the insulin receptor-related receptor (IRR) are covalently-linked homodimers made up of several structural domains. The molecular mechanism of ligand binding to the ectodomain of these receptors and the resulting activation of their tyrosine kinase domain is still not well understood. We have carried out an amino acid residue conservation analysis in order to reconstruct the phylogeny of the IR Family. We have confirmed the location of ligand binding site 1 of the IGF1R and IR. Importantly, we have also predicted the likely location of the insulin binding site 2 on the surface of the fibronectin type III domains of the IR. An evolutionary conserved surface on the second leucine-rich domain that may interact with the ligand could not be detected. We suggest a possible mechanical trigger of the activation of the IR that involves a slight 'twist' rotation of the last two fibronectin type III domains in order to face the likely location of insulin. Finally, a strong selective pressure was found amongst the IRR orthologous sequences, suggesting that this orphan receptor has a yet unknown physiological role which may be conserved from amphibians to mammals.  相似文献   

14.
We investigated structural requirements for dimerisation and ligand binding of insulin/IGF receptors. Soluble receptor fragments consisting of N-terminal domains (L1/CYS/L2, L1/CYS/L2/F0) or fibronectin domains (F0/F1/F2, F1/F2) were expressed in CHO cells. Fragments containing F0 or F1 domains were secreted as disulphide-linked dimers, and those consisting of L1/CYS/L2 domains as monomers. None of these proteins bound ligand. However, when a peptide of 16 amino acids from the alpha-subunit C-terminus was fused to the C-terminus of L1/CYS/L2, the monomeric insulin and IGF receptor constructs bound their respective ligands with affinity only 10-fold lower than native receptors.  相似文献   

15.
The high resolution crystal structure of an N-terminal fragment of the IGF-I receptor, has been reported. While this fragment is itself devoid of ligand binding activity, mutational analysis has indicated that its N terminus (L1, amino acids 1-150) and the C terminus of its cysteine-rich domain (amino acids 190-300) contain ligand binding determinants. Mutational analysis also suggests that amino acids 692-702 from the C terminus of the alpha subunit are critical for ligand binding. A fusion protein, formed from these fragments, binds IGF-I with an affinity similar to that of the whole extracellular domain, suggesting that these are the minimal structural elements of the IGF-I binding site. To further characterize the binding site, we have performed structure directed and alanine-scanning mutagenesis of L1, the cysteine-rich domain and amino acids 692-702. Alanine mutants of residues in these regions were transiently expressed as secreted recombinant receptors and their affinity was determined. In L1 alanine mutants of Asp(8), Asn(11), Tyr(28), His(30), Leu(33), Leu(56), Phe(58), Arg(59), and Trp(79) produced a 2- to 10-fold decrease in affinity and alanine mutation of Phe(90) resulted in a 23-fold decrease in affinity. In the cysteine-rich domain, mutation of Arg(240), Phe(241), Glu(242), and Phe(251) produced a 2- to 10-fold decrease in affinity. In the region between amino acids 692 and 702, alanine mutation of Phe(701) produced a receptor devoid of binding activity and alanine mutations of Phe(693), Glu(693), Asn(694), Leu(696), His(697), Asn(698), and Ile(700) exhibited decreases in affinity ranging from 10- to 30-fold. With the exception of Trp(79), the disruptive mutants in L1 form a discrete epitope on the surface of the receptor. Those in the cysteine-rich domain essential for intact affinity also form a discrete epitope together with Trp(79).  相似文献   

16.
Binding of [125I]monoiodoinsulin to human astrocytoma cells (U-373 MG) was time dependent, reaching equilibrium after 1 h at 22 degrees C with equilibrium binding corresponding to 2.2 fmol/mg protein: this represents approximately 2,000 occupied binding sites per cell. The t1/2 of 125I-insulin dissociation at 22 degrees C was 10 min; the dissociation rate constant of 1.1 X 10(-2) s-1 was unaffected by a high concentration of unlabeled insulin (16.7 microM). Porcine insulin competed for specific 125I-insulin binding in a dose-dependent manner and Scatchard analysis suggested multiple affinity binding sites (higher affinity Ka = 4.4 X 10(8) M-1 and lower affinity Ka = 7.4 X 10(6) M-1). Glucagon and somatostatin did not compete for specific insulin binding. Incubation of cells with insulin (0.5 microM) for 2 h at 37 degrees C increased [2-14C]uridine incorporation into nucleic acid by 62 +/- 2% (n = 3) above basal. Cyclic AMP, in the absence of insulin, also stimulated nucleoside incorporation into nucleic acid [65 +/- 1% (n = 3)] above basal. Preincubation with cyclic AMP followed by insulin had an additive effect on nucleoside incorporation [160 +/- 4% (n = 3) above basal]. Dipyridamole (50 microM), a nucleoside transport inhibitor, blocked both basal and stimulated uridine incorporation. These studies confirm that human astrocytoma cells possess specific insulin receptors with a demonstrable effect of ligand binding on uridine incorporation into nucleic acid.  相似文献   

17.
The human insulin receptor is expressed as two isoforms that are generated by alternate splicing of its mRNA; the B isoform has 12 additional amino acids (718-729) encoded by exon 11 of the gene. The isoforms have been reported to have different ligand binding properties. To further characterize their insulin binding properties, we have performed structure-directed alanine-scanning mutagenesis of a major insulin binding site of the receptor, formed from the receptor L1 domain (amino acids 1-470) and amino acids 705-715 at the C terminus of the alpha subunit. Alanine mutants of each isoform were transiently expressed as recombinant secreted extracellular domain in 293 cells, and their insulin binding properties were evaluated by competitive binding assays. Mutation of Arg(86) and Phe(96) of each isoform resulted in receptors that were not secreted. The Kds of unmutated receptors were almost identical for both isoforms. Several new mutations compromising insulin binding were identified. In L1, mutation of Leu(37) decreased affinity 20- to 40-fold and mutations of Val(94), Glu(97), Glu(120), and Lys(121) 3 to 10-fold for each isoform. A number of mutations produced differential effects on the two isoforms. Mutation of Asn(15) in the L1 domain and Phe(714) at the C terminus of the alpha subunit inactivated the A isoform but only reduced the affinity of the B isoform 40- to 60-fold. At the C terminus of the alpha subunit, mutations of Asp(707), Val(713), and Val(715) produced 7- to 16-fold reductions in affinity of the A isoform but were without effect on the B isoform. In contrast, alanine mutations of Tyr(708) and Asn(711) inactivated the B isoform but only reduced the affinities of the A isoform 11- and 6-fold, respectively. In conclusion, alanine-scanning mutagenesis of the insulin receptor A and B isoforms has identified several new side chains contributing to insulin binding and indicates that the energetic contributions of certain side chains differ in each isoform, suggesting that different molecular mechanisms are used to obtain the same affinity.  相似文献   

18.
Fluorescence polarization, gel exclusion chromatography and affinity chromatography were used to characterize the interaction of heparins of different size with human plasma fibronectin (Fn) and several of its isolated domains. The fluid-phase interaction of Fn with heparin was dominated by the 30 kDa and 40 kDa Hep-2 domains located near the C-terminal ends of the A and B chains respectively. The 30 kDa Hep-2A domain from the heavy chain was indistinguishable from the 40 kDa Hep-2B domain in this respect; the presence of an additional type III homology unit in the latter had no effect on the binding. Evidence was provided that each Hep-2 domain has two binding sites for heparin. The N-terminal Hep-1 domain reacted weakly in fluid phase even though it binds strongly to immobilized heparin. Fn and Hep-2 fragments were rather undiscriminating in their reaction with fluoresceinamine-labelled heparins of different sizes. However, oligosaccharides smaller than the tetradecasaccharide (14-mer) bound Fn with a 5-10-fold lower affinity. These results suggest that the Hep-2 domains of Fn are able to recognize a broad spectrum of oligosaccharides that presumably vary significantly with respect to the amount and spatial distribution of charge.  相似文献   

19.
Glucagon-like peptide-1 (GLP-1) and exendin-4 (Ex4) are homologous peptides with established potential for treatment of type 2 diabetes. They bind and activate the pancreatic GLP-1 receptor (GLP-1R) with similar affinity and potency and thereby promote insulin secretion in a glucose-dependent manner. GLP-1R belongs to family B of the seven transmembrane G-protein coupled receptors. The N-terminal extracellular domain (nGLP-1R) is a ligand binding domain with differential affinity for Ex4 and GLP-1: low affinity for GLP-1 and high affinity for exendin-4. The superior affinity of nGLP-1R for Ex4 was previously explained by an additional interaction between nGLP-1R and the C-terminal Trp-cage of Ex4. In this study we have combined biophysical and pharmacological approaches thus relating structural properties of the ligands in solution to their relative binding affinity for nGLP-1R. We used both a tracer competition assay and ligand-induced thermal stabilization of nGLP-1R to measure the relative affinity of full length, truncated, and chimeric ligands for soluble refolded nGLP-1R. The ligands in solution and the conformational consequences of ligand binding to nGLP-1R were characterized by circular dichroism and fluorescence spectroscopy. We found a correlation between the helical content of the free ligands and their relative binding affinity for nGLP-1R, supporting the hypothesis that the ligands are helical at least in the segment that binds to nGLP-1R. The Trp-cage of Ex4 was not necessary to maintain a superior helicity of Ex4 compared to GLP-1. The results suggest that the differential affinity of nGLP-1R is explained almost entirely by divergent residues in the central part of the ligands: Leu10-Gly30 of Ex4 and Val16-Arg36 of GLP-1. In view of our results it appears that the Trp-cage plays only a minor role for the interaction between Ex4 and nGLP-1R and for the differential affinity of nGLP-1R for GLP-1 and Ex4.  相似文献   

20.
Mutational analyses of the secreted recombinant insulin receptor extracellular domain have identified a ligand binding site composed of residues located in the L1 domain (amino acids 1-470) and at the C terminus of the alpha subunit (amino acids 705-715). To evaluate the physiological significance of this ligand binding site, we have transiently expressed cDNAs encoding full-length receptors with alanine mutations of the residues forming the functional epitopes of this binding site and determined their insulin binding properties. Insulin bound to wild-type receptors with complex kinetics, which were fitted to a two-component sequential model; the Kd of the high affinity component was 0.03 nM and that of the low affinity component was 0.4 nM. Mutations of Arg14, Phe64, Phe705, Glu706, Tyr708, Asn711, and Val715 inactivated the receptor. Alanine mutation of Asn15 resulted in a 20-fold decrease in affinity, whereas mutations of Asp12, Gln34, Leu36, Leu37, Leu87, Phe89, Tyr91, Lys121, Leu709, and Phe714 all resulted in 4-10-fold decreases. When the effects of the mutations were compared with those of the same mutations of the secreted recombinant receptor, significant differences were observed for Asn15, Leu37, Asp707, Leu709, Tyr708, Asn711, Phe714, and Val715, suggesting that the molecular basis for the interaction of each form of the receptor with insulin differs. We also examined the effects of alanine mutations of Asn15, Gln34, and Phe89 on insulin-induced receptor autophosphorylation. They had no effect on the maximal response to insulin but produced an increase in the EC50 commensurate with their effect on the affinity of the receptor for insulin.  相似文献   

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