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Biochemical Basis of the Interaction between Cystic Fibrosis Transmembrane Conductance Regulator and Immunoglobulin-like Repeats of Filamin
Authors:Laura Smith  Richard C Page  Zhen Xu  Ekta Kohli  Paul Litman  Jay C Nix  Sujay S Ithychanda  Jianmin Liu  Jun Qin  Saurav Misra  Carole M Liedtke
Institution:From the Willard Alan Bernbaum Center for Cystic Fibrosis Research, Departments of Pediatrics at Rainbow Babies and Children''s Hospital and of Physiology and Biophysics, Case Western Reserve University, Cleveland, Ohio 44106.;the §Department of Molecular Cardiology, The Cleveland Clinic, Cleveland, Ohio 44195, and ;the Molecular Biology Consortium, Advanced Light Source, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720
Abstract:Mutations in the chloride channel cystic fibrosis transmembrane regulator (CFTR) cause cystic fibrosis, a genetic disorder characterized by defects in CFTR biosynthesis, localization to the cell surface, or activation by regulatory factors. It was discovered recently that surface localization of CFTR is stabilized by an interaction between the CFTR N terminus and the multidomain cytoskeletal protein filamin. The details of the CFTR-filamin interaction, however, are unclear. Using x-ray crystallography, we show how the CFTR N terminus binds to immunoglobulin-like repeat 21 of filamin A (FlnA-Ig21). CFTR binds to β-strands C and D of FlnA-Ig21 using backbone-backbone hydrogen bonds, a linchpin serine residue, and hydrophobic side-chain packing. We use NMR to determine that the CFTR N terminus also binds to several other immunoglobulin-like repeats from filamin A in vitro. Our structural data explain why the cystic fibrosis-causing S13F mutation disrupts CFTR-filamin interaction. We show that FlnA-Ig repeats transfected into cultured Calu-3 cells disrupt CFTR-filamin interaction and reduce surface levels of CFTR. Our findings suggest that filamin A stabilizes surface CFTR by anchoring it to the actin cytoskeleton through interactions with multiple filamin Ig repeats. Such an interaction mode may allow filamins to cluster multiple CFTR molecules and to promote colocalization of CFTR and other filamin-binding proteins in the apical plasma membrane of epithelial cells.
Keywords:Cytoskeleton  Diseases/Cystic Fibrosis  Methods/NMR  Methods/X-ray Crystallography  Protein/Protein-Protein Interactions  Protein/Domains  Protein/Motifs  Protein/Structure  Filamin
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