4.8 Article

Structural basis of steroid hormone perception by the receptor kinase BRI1

Journal

NATURE
Volume 474, Issue 7352, Pages 467-U90

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/nature10153

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Funding

  1. Howard Hughes Medical Institute
  2. National Science Foundation [IOS-0649389]
  3. European Molecular Biology Organisation
  4. International Human Frontier Science Program Organisation
  5. Philippe Foundation
  6. NIH [AI042266]
  7. Skaggs Institute for Chemical Biology

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Polyhydroxylated steroids are regulators of body shape and size in higher organisms. In metazoans, intracellular receptors recognize these molecules. Plants, however, perceive steroids at membranes, using the membrane-integral receptor kinase BRASSINOSTEROID INSENSITIVE 1 (BRI1). Here we report the structure of the Arabidopsis thaliana BRI1 ligand-binding domain, determined by X-ray diffraction at 2.5 angstrom resolution. We find a superhelix of 25 twisted leucine-rich repeats (LRRs), an architecture that is strikingly different from the assembly of LRRs in animal Toll-like receptors. A 70-amino-acid island domain between LRRs 21 and 22 folds back into the interior of the superhelix to create a surface pocket for binding the plant hormone brassinolide. Known loss- and gain-of-function mutations map closely to the hormone-binding site. We propose that steroid binding to BRI1 generates a docking platform for a co-receptor that is required for receptor activation. Our findings provide insight into the activation mechanism of this highly expanded family of plant receptors that have essential roles in hormone, developmental and innate immunity signalling.

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