Molecular Analysis of the Epidermal Growth Factor-like Short Consensus Repeat Domain-mediated Protein-Protein Interactions

Epidermal growth factor-like (EGF) and short consensus repeat (SCR) domains are commonly found in cell surface and soluble proteins that mediate specific protein-protein recognition events. Unlike the immunoglobulin (Ig) superfamily, very little is known about the general properties of intermolecula...

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Published inThe Journal of biological chemistry Vol. 276; no. 26; pp. 24160 - 24169
Main Authors Lin, Hsi-Hsien, Stacey, Martin, Saxby, Claire, Knott, Vroni, Chaudhry, Yasmin, Evans, David, Gordon, Siamon, McKnight, Andrew J., Handford, Penny, Lea, Susan
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Inc 29.06.2001
American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology
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Summary:Epidermal growth factor-like (EGF) and short consensus repeat (SCR) domains are commonly found in cell surface and soluble proteins that mediate specific protein-protein recognition events. Unlike the immunoglobulin (Ig) superfamily, very little is known about the general properties of intermolecular interactions encoded by these common modules, and in particular, how specificity of binding is achieved. We have dissected the binding of CD97 (a member of the EGF-TM7 family) to the complement regulator CD55, two cell surface modular proteins that contain EGF and SCR domains, respectively. We demonstrate that the interaction is mediated solely by these domains and is characterized by a low affinity (86 μm) and rapid off-rate (at least 0.6 s−1). The interaction is Ca2+ -dependent but is unaffected by glycosylation of the EGF domains. Using biotinylated multimerized peptides in cell binding assays and surface plasmon resonance, we show that a CD97-related EGF-TM7 molecule (termed EMR2), differing by only three amino acids within the EGF domains, binds CD55 with aKD at least an order of magnitude weaker than that of CD97. These results suggest that low affinity cell-cell interactions may be a general feature of highly expressed cell surface proteins and that specificity of SCR-EGF binding can be finely tuned by a small number of amino acid changes on the EGF module surface.
ISSN:0021-9258
1083-351X
DOI:10.1074/jbc.M101770200