Published May 11, 2023
| Version v1
Journal article
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The structure of fly Teneurin-m reveals an asymmetric self-assembly that allows expansion into zippers
Description
Teneurins are conserved cell adhesion molecules essential for embryogenesis and neural development in animals. Key to teneurin function is the ability of its extracellular region to form homophilic interactions in cis and/or in trans. However, our molecular understanding of teneurin homophilic interaction remains largely incomplete. Here, we showed that an extracellular fragment of Teneurin-m, the major teneurin homolog in flies, behaves as a homodimer in solution. The structure of Teneurin-m revealed that the transthyretin-related domain from one protomer and the β-propeller domain from the other mediates Teneurin-m self-association, which is abolished by point mutation of conserved residues. Strikingly, this architecture generates an asymmetric oligomerization interface that enables expansion of Teneurin-m into long zipper arrays reminiscent of protocadherins. An alternatively spliced site that exists only in vertebrates and regulates homophilic interaction in mammalian teneurins overlaps with the fly Teneurin-m self-association interface. Our work provides a molecular understanding of teneurin homophilic interaction and sheds light on its role in teneurin function throughout evolution.
Data availability
The final model and crystallographic data have been deposited into the Protein Data Bank under PDB ID 8FIA (http://identifiers.org/pdb/8FIA). Other raw data are provided in Source Data. Plasmids and other reagents are available upon reasonable request to the corresponding author, Demet Araç.Files
Structure-of-fly-Teneurin-m.pdf
Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.15252/embr.202256728
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:5922
Funding
- National Institute of General Medical Sciences
- R01GM134035
- National Institute of General Medical Sciences
- F32GM142266
- National Institute of General Medical Sciences
- R35GM148412