4.8 Article

Latrophilin fragments behave as independent proteins that associate and signal on binding of LTXN4C

Journal

EMBO JOURNAL
Volume 23, Issue 22, Pages 4423-4433

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1038/sj.emboj.7600443

Keywords

G-protein-coupled receptor; latrophilin; latrotoxin; protein processing

Funding

  1. Wellcome Trust [074359] Funding Source: Medline

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Heptahelical, or G-protein-coupled, receptors control many cellular functions and normally consist of one polypeptide chain. In contrast, heptahelical receptors that belong to the long N-terminus, group B (LNB) family are cleaved constitutively into two fragments. The N-terminal fragments (NTFs) resemble cell-adhesion proteins and the C-terminal fragments (CTFs) are typical G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) with seven transmembrane regions. However, the functional roles of this cleavage and of any subsequent NTF-CTF interactions remain to be identified. Using latrophilin, a well-studied member of the LNB family, we now demonstrate that cleavage is critical for delivery of this receptor to the cell surface. On the plasma membrane, NTF and CTF behave as separate membrane proteins involved, respectively, in cell-surface reception and signalling. The two fragments can also internalise independently. However, separated NTF and CTF can reassociate on solubilisation. Agonist binding to NTF on the cell surface also induces re-association of fragments and provokes signal transduction via CTF. These findings define a novel principle of structural and functional organisation of the cleaved, two-subunit GPCRs.

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