Title : The extracellular architecture of adherens junctions revealed by crystal structures of type I cadherins
Abstract :
- Adherens junctions, which play a central role in intercellular adhesion, comprise clusters of type I classical cadherins that bind via extracellular domains extended from opposing cell surfaces
- We show that a molecular layer seen in crystal structures of E- and N-cadherin ectodomains reported here and in a previous C-cadherin structure corresponds to the extracellular architecture of adherens junctions
- In all three ectodomain crystals, cadherins dimerize through a trans adhesive interface and are connected by a second, cis , interface
- Assemblies formed by E-cadherin ectodomains coated on liposomes also appear to adopt this structure
- Fluorescent imaging of junctions formed from wild-type and mutant E-cadherins in cultured cells confirm conclusions derived from structural evidence
- Mutations that interfere with the trans interface ablate adhesion, whereas cis interface mutations disrupt stable junction formation
- Our observations are consistent with a model for junction assembly involving strong trans and weak cis interactions localized in the ectodomain
Output (sent_index, trigger,
protein,
sugar,
site):
Output(Part-Of) (sent_index,
protein,
site):
- 2. N-cadherin, ectodomains
- 4. E-cadherin, ectodomains
*Output_Site_Fusion* (sent_index,
protein,
sugar,
site):