Receptor tyrosine kinases
From Proteopedia
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| - | <StructureSection load='1dq8' size=' | + | <StructureSection load='1dq8' size='300' side='right' caption='Solved Structures of Ephrin Type-A Receptors, [[1dq8]]' scene='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Opening/1'> |
Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) are part of the larger family of protein [[Tyrosine kinase|tyrosine kinases]]. They are the high-affinity cell surface receptors for many polypeptide [[Growth factors|growth factors]], cytokines, and [[Hormone|hormones]]. Approximately 20 different RTK classes have been identified.<ref>PMID:26579483</ref> | Receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) are part of the larger family of protein [[Tyrosine kinase|tyrosine kinases]]. They are the high-affinity cell surface receptors for many polypeptide [[Growth factors|growth factors]], cytokines, and [[Hormone|hormones]]. Approximately 20 different RTK classes have been identified.<ref>PMID:26579483</ref> | ||
| + | See also [[Kinase-linked, enzyme-linked and related receptors]] and [[Receptor]]. | ||
==RTK class I [[Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor]] family== | ==RTK class I [[Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor]] family== | ||
| - | [[Lapatinib]] is a EGFR inhibitor used in breast cancer treatment. | + | [[Lapatinib]] is a EGFR inhibitor used in breast cancer treatment. EGFRs are overexpressed in many types of human carcinomas including lung, pancreatic, and breast cancer, and are often mutated. This overexpression leads to excessive activation of the anti-apoptotic [[Ras]] signaling cascade, resulting in uncontrolled [[DNA_Replication|DNA synthesis]] and cell proliferation. The <scene name='Lapatinib/Egfr/1'>EGFR tyrosine kinase domain</scene> is responsible for activating this Ras signaling cascade. Upon binding ligands like Epidermal Growth Factor, EGFR dimerizes and autophosphorylates several tyrosine residues at its C-terminal domain. Upon phosphorylation, EGFR undergoes a significant conformational shift, revealing an additional binding site capable of binding and activating downstream signaling proteins. |
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| - | [[Gefitinib]] inhibits the EGFR by <scene name='Gefitinib/Bound/1'>binding to the ATP-binding site</scene> located within the kinase domain. Residues | + | [[Gefitinib]] inhibits the EGFR by <scene name='Gefitinib/Bound/1'>binding to the ATP-binding site</scene> located within the kinase domain. Residues Lys745, Leu788, Ala743, Thr790, Gln791, Met193, Pro794, Gly796, Asp800, Ser719, Glu762, & Met766 tightly bind the inhibitor. Unable to bind ATP, EGFR is incapable of autophosphorylating its C-terminal tyrosines, and the uncontrolled cell-proliferation signal is terminated. |
| - | [[Erlotinib]] inhibits the EGFR by <scene name='Erlotinib/Bound/1'>binding to the ATP-binding site</scene> located within the kinase domain. EGFR uses residues | + | [[Erlotinib]] inhibits the EGFR by <scene name='Erlotinib/Bound/1'>binding to the ATP-binding site</scene> located within the kinase domain. EGFR uses residues Asp831, Lys721, Thr766, Leu820, Gly772, Phe771, Leu694, Pro770, Met769, Leu768, Gln767 & Ala719 to tightly bind the inhibitor. Unable to bind ATP, EGFR is incapable of autophosphorylating its C-terminal tyrosines, and the uncontrolled cell-proliferation signal is terminated. |
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See also [[Herceptin - Mechanism of Action]] | See also [[Herceptin - Mechanism of Action]] | ||
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[[Insulin receptor]] | [[Insulin receptor]] | ||
| - | The insulin receptor (IR) is a dimer of <scene name='83/839263/Alpha_and_beta_subunit/3'>heterodimers</scene> made of 2<scene name='83/832953/Alpha_subunits/5'>α-subunits</scene> and 2 <scene name='83/832953/Beta_subunits/4'>β-subunits</scene>. Within the extracellular ectodomain, there are 4 potential <scene name='83/832953/Binding_sites/3'>binding sites</scene> that can interact with insulin on the extracellular side of the membrane | + | The insulin receptor (IR) is a dimer of <scene name='83/839263/Alpha_and_beta_subunit/3'>heterodimers</scene> made of 2 <scene name='83/832953/Alpha_subunits/5'>α-subunits</scene> and 2 <scene name='83/832953/Beta_subunits/4'>β-subunits</scene>. Within the extracellular ectodomain, there are 4 potential <scene name='83/832953/Binding_sites/3'>binding sites</scene> that can interact with insulin on the extracellular side of the membrane. |
| - | The <scene name='83/832953/Alpha_subunits/5'>α-subunits</scene> make up the extracellular domain of the IR and are the sites of insulin binding. The α-subunit is comprised of 2 Leucine rich domains (L1 & L2), a Cysteine rich domain (CR), and a <scene name='83/832953/Alpha_c_helix/6'>an α-chain C-terminal helix (α-CT)</scene>. α-CT has a unique position that allows it to reach across the receptor and interact with the insulin at the binding site on the opposing side of the receptor. The α-subunits are held together by a disulfide bond between <scene name='83/832953/Cysteine_bond/2'>cysteine residues</scene> on each α-subunit. The disulfide bonds are important to the overall stabilization of the molecule as it binds to insulin. Two types of insulin binding sites are present in the α-subunits, <scene name='83/832953/Sites_1_and_1_prime_location/17'>sites 1 and 1'</scene> and <scene name='83/832953/Sites_2_and_2_prime_location/13'>sites 2 and 2'</scene>. The sites are in pairs because of the heterodimeric nature of the receptor. Due to structural differences, as well as greater surface area and accessibility, binding sites 1 and 1' have much higher affinity for insulin binding than sites 2 and 2'. Insulin can also bind at sites 2 and 2', but the location on the back of the | + | The <scene name='83/832953/Alpha_subunits/5'>α-subunits</scene> make up the extracellular domain of the IR and are the sites of insulin binding. The α-subunit is comprised of 2 Leucine rich domains (L1 & L2), a Cysteine rich domain (CR), and a <scene name='83/832953/Alpha_c_helix/6'>an α-chain C-terminal helix (α-CT)</scene>. α-CT has a unique position that allows it to reach across the receptor and interact with the insulin at the binding site on the opposing side of the receptor. The α-subunits are held together by a disulfide bond between <scene name='83/832953/Cysteine_bond/2'>cysteine residues</scene> on each α-subunit. The disulfide bonds are important to the overall stabilization of the molecule as it binds to insulin. Two types of insulin binding sites are present in the α-subunits, <scene name='83/832953/Sites_1_and_1_prime_location/17'>sites 1 and 1'</scene> and <scene name='83/832953/Sites_2_and_2_prime_location/13'>sites 2 and 2'</scene>. The sites are in pairs because of the heterodimeric nature of the receptor. Due to structural differences, as well as greater surface area and accessibility, binding sites 1 and 1' have much higher affinity for insulin binding than sites 2 and 2'. Insulin can also bind at sites 2 and 2', but the location on the back of the β-sheet of the FnIII-1 domain and lack of surface area decreases the likelihood of their binding site becoming occupied as quickly. |
The <scene name='83/832953/Beta_subunits/4'>β-subunits</scene> spans from the extracellular domain across the TM region and into the intracellular portion of the IR. The β-subunit is composed of part of fibronectin domain III-2 and all of Fibronectin domain III-3. The β-subunit's FnIII-3 domain has links through the TM region into the intracellular part of the membrane. Cryo-EM provided clear representations of the FnIII-2 and FnIII-3 domains, but are missing the TM and intracellular regions. Although the FnIII-3 domain is connected to the TM and intracellular regions, the active <scene name='83/839263/T-shape/4'>T-shape</scene> conformation likely extends all the way to the tyrosine kinase domain region ([[4xlv]]). | The <scene name='83/832953/Beta_subunits/4'>β-subunits</scene> spans from the extracellular domain across the TM region and into the intracellular portion of the IR. The β-subunit is composed of part of fibronectin domain III-2 and all of Fibronectin domain III-3. The β-subunit's FnIII-3 domain has links through the TM region into the intracellular part of the membrane. Cryo-EM provided clear representations of the FnIII-2 and FnIII-3 domains, but are missing the TM and intracellular regions. Although the FnIII-3 domain is connected to the TM and intracellular regions, the active <scene name='83/839263/T-shape/4'>T-shape</scene> conformation likely extends all the way to the tyrosine kinase domain region ([[4xlv]]). | ||
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[[Student Projects for UMass Chemistry 423 Spring 2012-1]] | [[Student Projects for UMass Chemistry 423 Spring 2012-1]] | ||
| - | + | ==RTK class III [[Platelet-derived growth factors and receptors|Platelet-derived growth factor receptor]] family== | |
| + | ==RTK class IV [[Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor]] family== | ||
| + | [[Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor]]s (VEGFRs) are [[tyrosine kinase receptors]] responsible for binding with [[VEGF]] to initiate signal cascades that stimulate angiogenesis among other effects. The tyrosine kinase domain of VEGFR-2 is separated into 2 segments with a 70 amino acid long kinase insert region. Upon binding VEGFA and subsequent dimerization, VEGFR-2 is autophosphoryalted at the carboxy terminal tail and kinase insert region, 6 tyrosine residues of VEGFR2 are autophosphorylated. <scene name='41/411436/Cv/2'>Auto-phosphorylation of residues 1054 and 1059</scene> within the activation loop of VEGFR2 leads to increased kinase activity. <scene name='41/411436/Cv/4'>Anti-tumor inhibitor binding site</scene> ([[3c7q]]). | ||
| - | + | See also [[Bevacizumab]]. | |
| + | ==RTK class V [[Fibroblast growth factor receptor]] family== | ||
| + | FGFR consist of an extracellular ligand-binding domain (LBD), transmembrane helix domain and cytoplasmic tyrosine kinase activity domain (TKD) with phosphorylated tyrosine designated PTR. FGFR LBD contains 3 immunoglobulin-like domains D1, D2 and D3. | ||
| - | + | <scene name='54/544712/Cv/2'>Human fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 ligand-binding domain modules D2 and D3 with 2 molecules of fibroblast growth factor 1</scene> (PDB code [[1evt]]). | |
| + | ==RTK class VIII [[Hepatocyte growth factor receptor]] family== | ||
| + | The A loop of the wt receptor contains 2 tyrosines at position 1234 and 1235. When these 2 residues become phosphorylated, the kinase can become active. A unique part of the c-met structure is the pair of <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/Tyrisine_docking_sites/1'>tyrosine residues (1349 and 1356)</scene>. These tyrosines are necessary for normal c-met signaling. When these 2 tyrosines were substituted with with phenylalanine in mice, the mice had an embryonically lethal phenotype and defects were found in placenta, liver, muscles and nerves. In a wt c-met, these sites will become phosphorylated and act as docking sites for many different transducers and adapters. Upon phosphorylation, these tyrosines can bind with Src homology 2 (SH2) domains and phophotyrosine-binding (PTB), and therefore bind many effectors that will cause downstream effects such as cell proliferation, scattering and inhibition of apoptosis. This receptor follows the typical structure of a protein kinase, with a bilobal structure. The N-terminal contains <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/Beta_sheets/1'>β-sheets</scene> and is linked through a hinge to the C lobe, which is full of α helices. This particular kinase domain is very similar to the domains of the insulin receptor kinase and fibroblast growth factor receptor kinase.<ref>PMID: 14559966</ref> This structure is made up of many α-helices that move in the transformation from inactive to active kinase. Some of these helices are conserved in many different tyrosine kinases. C-met does show a divergence from other tyrosine kinases (such as IRK and FGFRK) in the helix formed at the N-terminus, before the core kinase domain, in residues <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/1060-1069/1'>1060-1069</scene>. The αA is in contact with αC and so causes αC to be in a slightly different orientation than in FGFRK and IRK. Residues Leu-1062, Val-1066, and Val-1069 of αA <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/A_and_c_intercalating/1'>intercalate</scene> with with residues Leu-1125 and Ile-1129 of αC. There is another <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/A_and_c_intercalating/2'>interaction</scene> between the residues Ile-1053, Leu-1055 and Leu-1058 of αA and Ile-1118 and Val-1121 of αC. Because of the movement of αC during activation of the kinase, it is an assumption that αA is also part of the kinase activation upon ligand binding. | ||
| - | The | + | The particular structure of the hepatocyte growth factor tyrosine kinase domain is one harboring a human cancer mutation. The 2 |
| + | <scene name='User:Juliette_Personius/sandbox_1/1234_and_1235_mutations/1'>tyr1234 and tyr1235</scene> are replaced by a phenylalanine and aspartate, respectively. This mutation normally causes the receptor to be constitutively active, and is found in HNSC (Head, Neck squamous cell) carcinoma. Although there is no longer phosphorylation at these sites, it is believed that the negative charge of the aspartate resembles the negative phosphate that would normally cause activation, and therefore keeps the protein in its active form. <ref>PMID: 14559966</ref> There is a 3rd mutation at Tyr-1194 which is substituted for a <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/1194/1'>phenylalanine</scene>. This is shown to point into the <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/1198/1'>pocket</scene> formed by Lys-1198 and Leu-1195 from αE. <ref>PMID: 14559966</ref> This structure is conserved in the wild type protein, suggesting that the mutation at residue 1149 is not changing the structure at this position. | ||
| - | + | <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/K-252a/1'>K-252a</scene> is a staurosporine analog. Staurosporine is an inhibitor of many Ser/Thr Kinases, and has been shown to also inhibit c-Met activation by inhibiting its autophosphorylation. The structures of K-252a and staurosporine are very similar, with the main difference being that K-252a has a furanose instead of a pyranose structure. The binding of K-252a causes the c-Met to adopt an inhibitory conformation of the A-loop, specifically with residues <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/Residues1231-1244/1'>1231-1244</scene>. This segment blocks the place where the substrate tyrosine side chain would bind, if the protein were in an active conformation. Residues | |
| + | <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/Catalytic_1127/1'>1223-1230</scene> also enhance this inhibitory conformation, as they constrain αC into a conformation that does not allow the catalytic placement of <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/1127/1'>Glu-1127</scene> keeping αC in an inactive conformation. In an active kinase, Glu-1127 would form a salt bridge with Lys-1110. | ||
| + | Residues 1229-1230 pass through the triphosphate subsite of bound ATP blocking ATP binding. The K-252a itself binds in the adenosine pocket, therefore also inhibiting the binding of ATP. The binding of K-252a is very favorable. This is probably due to polar interactions as well as a change in conformation upon binding. There is a concerted conformational change in the complex upon K-252a binding. One of these changes involves the A-loop, specifically residues <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/1228-1230/1'>1228-1230</scene>. In the Apo-Met structure, the side chain of Met-1229 would pass through the ring of the inhibitor, and so, in order to make room for K-252a, the segment must move, with residues 1229 and 1230 moving by 3-4 Å. In order to make room for the side chain of Tyr-1230, <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/1208_and_tyr/1'>Arg-1208</scene> moves by 8 Å toward <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/Asp_1204/1'>Asp-1204</scene>. Arg-1208, which in the uninhibited complex would stack with tyr-1230, now stacks with | ||
| + | <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/1234/1'>Phe-1234</scene>. K-252a binds in the adenosine pocket. It has 4 hydrogen bonds to the enzyme, with <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/2_hydrogen_bonds/1'>two</scene> of these mimicking hydrogen bonds of an adenine base. There is a hydrogen bond between the K-252a nitrogen and the carbonyl oxygen of Pro-1158, and another between the K252-a carbonyl oxygen and the hydrogen of the amide of Met-1160. There are 2 more hydrogen bonds between the 3' hydroxyl and carbonyl oxygen and the <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/2_hydrogen_bonds_1/1'>tyr-1230</scene> of the A loop. There are also many hydrophobic interactions between the interface of the enzyme and K-252a. The residues involved in this are Ile-1084, Gly-1085, Phe-1089, Val-1092, Ala-1108, Lys-1110, and Leu-1140 (<scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/N_lobe_interactions_with_k252a/1'>N lobe</scene>); Leu-1157, Pro-1158, Tyr-1159, and Met-1160 (<scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/N_lobe_interactions_with_k252a/2'>hinge region</scene>); and Met-1211, Ala-1226, Asp-1228, Met-1229, and Tyr-1230 (<scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/N_lobe_interactions_with_k252a/3'>C lobe</scene>). Met-1229, Met-1211 and Met-1160 all make up the <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/Platform/1'>platform</scene> for the indolocarbazole plane as they are all within van der Waals distance of it. | ||
| - | + | In c-Met, there are 2 tyrosines located in the C-terminal tail sequence, which, upon phosphorylation, act as the docking sites for many signal transducers. These tyrosines correspond to residues <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/Tyrisine_docking_sites/1'>1349 and 1356</scene>. Both of these sites interact with SH2, MBD and PTD domains of signal transducers. The residues <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/Extended_conformation/1'>1349-1352</scene> form an extended conformation, which is seen in other phosphopeptides that bind to SH2 domains. Residues | |
| - | + | <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/Beta_1_turn/1'>1353-1356</scene> form a type I β turn, which is similar to sequences that bind to Shc-PTB domians. Whether binding to SH2 domains or PTB domains, upon binding, these motifs would move to avoid clashes with the C lobe. The 3rd binding motif is found in residues <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/Type_2_beta_turn/1'>1356-1359</scene>, which form a type II β turn, and is similar to pohsphopeptides that bind Grb2. When comparing the unphosphorylated conformation of the motif to one that is phosphorylated, and bound to the Grb2 complex, there is a peptide flip between the bind of <scene name='Hepatocyte_growth_factor_receptor/1257_and_1258/1'>Val-1357 and Asn-1358</scene>. This suggests that when Grb2 docks onto c-Met, there is a change in orientation of this motif. These 3 binding motifs of the mutated structure are very similar to binding motifs that would be recognized by their binding partners, implying that the C-terminal supersite of this structure is very similar to that of an active c-met. | |
| - | + | ==RTK class IX [[Ephrin receptor]] family== | |
| + | *<scene name='45/450911/Cv/8'>Ephrin A3 receptor with peptide substrate, nucleotide derivative and Mg+2 ion</scene>. Water molecules are shown as red spheres. | ||
| + | *<scene name='45/450911/Cv/9'>Nucleotide derivative and Mg+2 ion binding site</scene>. | ||
| + | *<scene name='45/450911/Cv/10'>Peptide substrate binding site</scene> ([[3fxx]]). | ||
| - | The | + | [[Ephrin Type-A Receptor]] |
| + | The <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Ecto/2'>extracellular part of Eph receptors</scene> includes the N-terminal ephrin (Ligand)-binding domain (LBD), a cysteine-rich domain (CRD), and 2 fibronectin Type-III Repeats (FN3). EphA binds ephrins with <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Lbd_in/1'>its LBD</scene>. Most ephrins have a similar rigid structure which <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Ephrin_a2_opening/2'>includes four loops</scene>, AB, CD, FG, & GH. The LBD of EphA4 is said to be a “structural chameleon” able bind both A and B class ephrins. This explains why Ephrin Type-A receptors exhibit cross-class reactivity. The <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Epha4_opening/1'>overall structure of the EphA4 LBD </scene>includes four important loops, the BC, DE, GH, & JK loops. EphA4 binds the GH loop of the ephrin ligand <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Epha4_pocket/3'>within a deep pocket</scene> created by the EphA4 DE and JK loops. It is these loops, DE and JK, which undergo the greatest conformational shifts when binding either EphrinA2 or EphrinB2. <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Epha4_a2_interactions/2'>When binding EphrinA2</scene>, EphA4-Arg 162 forms a hydrogen bond with EphrinA2-Leu 138, while EphA4-Met 164 and EphA4-Leu 166 participate in hydrophobic interactions with EphrinA2-Leu 138 and EphrinA2-PHe 136. Although <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Ephrinb2_opening/1'>EphA4 binds EphrinB2</scene> in the same binding pocket, the local interactions are significantly different. Most notably, the α-helix present in the EphA4-EphrinA2 JK loop is disrupted in the EphA4-EphrinB2 structure. This is due to <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Ephrinb2_opening/2'>the steric clash</scene> that would occur between EphrinB2-Trp 122 and EphA4 Met 164. Instead, EphA4-Arg 162 and EphrinB2-Trp 122 form hydrophobic stacking interactions <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Ephrinb2_stabile/1'>among other interactions </scene> which stabilize the receptor-ligand complex. A morph of the movements EphA4 undergoes to bind EphrinA2 and EphrinB2 can be <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Morph/4'>seen here</scene>. | ||
| - | + | Eph-Ephrin complexes form two unique heterotetrameric assemblies consisting of distinct EphA2-EphA2 interfaces. <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Dimer_out/2'>The 1st tetrameric form</scene> is generated by <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Dimer_out_int/1'>Eph-Eph interactions only within the LBD</scene>. The 2nd <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Dimer_in/3'>tetrameric form</scene> involves complex <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Dimer_in_2/2'>interactions in the LBD</scene> and in the region <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Dimer_in_3/1'>near the CRD</scene>.<ref>PMID:20505120</ref> These two heterotetramers generate a <scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Clustering/2'>continuous Eph-ephrin assembly when combined</scene> (<scene name='Ephrin_Type-A_Receptor/Clustering2/1'>Alternative Coloring</scene>). The proximity of kinase domains in an eph-ephrin tetramer, favors transphosphorylation of tyrosines in the cytoplasmic domains. Phosphorylation promotes kinase activity by orienting the activation segment of the kinase domain in a way that favors subsrate binding and subsequent signaling. | |
| - | [[Sunitinib]] inhibits cellular signaling by targeting several different receptor tyrosine kinases (RTKs) including receptors for platelet-derived growth factor (PDGFRs) and [[VEGFR|vascular endothelial growth factor receptors]] (VEGFR). PDGFR and VEGFR play crucial roles in both tumor angiogenesis and cellular proliferation. Sunitinib binds at the ATP binding site of PDGFR & VEGFR, peventing the receptor kinase from binding ATP and phosphorylating their respective tyrosine target residues. Inhibition of PDGFR and VEGFR results in reduced tumor vascularization and cancer cell death. Sunitinib is also an inhibitor of KIT, a cytokine receptor inhibitor. Mutations of the KIT gene, often resulting in overexpression are associated with most gastrointestinal stromal [[cancer|tumors]].<ref>PMID: 12072198</ref> <scene name='Sunitinib/Kit/1'>The KIT protein</scene> is at equilibrium between two predominant confirmations, the active conformation and the autoinhibited inactive conformation. In its active conformation, KIT binds to stem cell factors, upon which KIT dimerizes and transmits second messenger signals ultimately resulting in cell survival and proliferation. In its inactive conformation, the "DFG Triad" of KIT, <scene name='Sunitinib/Dfg/1'>residues Asp 810, Phe 811, Gly 812</scene>, is in the "out" position, with Phe 811 occupying the ATP binding site, preventing phosphorylation and signaling. <scene name='Sunitinib/Bound/2'>Sunitinib inhibits KIT</scene> by preferentially binding and stabilizing the autoinhibited inactive conformation of KIT ([[Pharmacokinetics#Inhibitory_Concentration_.28IC50.29|IC<sub>50</sub>]] for Sunitinib is 40nM for inactive conformation and 21,000nM for active conformation). KIT binds Sunitinib using residues Lys 809, Val 603, Ala 621, Tyr 672, Cys 673, Leu 595, Cys 674, Gly 676, Leu 799, Glu 671 & Thr 670, locking the inhibitor in place and stabilizing the receptor in the inactive state.<ref>PMID:19164557</ref> | ||
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| - | See also [[Bevacizumab]]. | ||
| - | ==RTK class V [[Fibroblast growth factor receptor]] family== | ||
| - | ==RTK class VIII [[Hepatocyte growth factor receptor]] family== | ||
| - | ==RTK class IX [[Ephrin receptor]] family== | ||
==RTK class XIII [[Epithelial discoidin domain-containing receptor]] (DDR receptor) family== | ==RTK class XIII [[Epithelial discoidin domain-containing receptor]] (DDR receptor) family== | ||
| - | == | + | DDR1 contains a discoidin domain. This domain is about 150 amino acid long and is found in many blood coagulation factors. The structure of the <scene name='80/805011/Cv/3'>complex between DDR1 and imatinib</scene> shows hydrogen bonds interactions between the anti-cancer drug and the kinase domain including bonds with the <scene name='80/805011/Cv/4'>kinase allosteric site Asp-Phe-Gly (DFG motif)</scene><ref>PMID:24768818</ref>. Water molecules are shown as red spheres. |
| + | ==Neurotrophin receptor== | ||
| + | *[[High affinity nerve growth factor receptor]] | ||
| + | '''TrkA'''. Trk stands for Topomyosin-Related Kinase. TrkA ligand - nerve growth factor activates the receptor by stabilizing homodimer formation which initiates transautophosphorylation. <scene name='80/805001/Cv/4'>Structure of Nerve Growth Factor Complexed with the Extracellular Domain of TrkA</scene>. An <scene name='80/805001/Cv/7'>Arg residue</scene>, conserved in all neutrophins, forms the most important binding determinant between TrkA and its ligand - nerve growth factor - which forms the active homodimer of the receptor. <scene name='80/805001/Cv/6'>All interactions between TrkA chain A and NGF</scene>. | ||
| + | *[[Tyrosine kinase receptor|Tyrosine kinase receptor TrkA]] | ||
| + | TRK-A contains an extracellular ligand binding domain (LBD), a transmembrane helix and an intracellular region which contains the kinase domain. The kinase domain ([[4yne]]) contains the tripeptide DFG which flips out in TRK-A inactivated form. <scene name='83/839914/Cv/7'>Inhibitor binding site</scene> ([[4yne]]). The structure of the complex of TRK-A with the phenylpyrrolidine derivative shows the inhibitor forming hydrogen bonds to Met620 and Lys572 residues and π-π interactions of it with Phe617 and Phe 698. | ||
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| + | The <scene name='83/839914/Cv/4'>complex between TRK-A and the nerve growth factor</scene> ([[2ifg]]) is a 2:2 dimer. The C-terminal immunoglobulin-like domain interacts with the NGF. The extracellular domain of TRK-A contains <scene name='83/839914/Cv/5'>3 Leu-rich regions</scene> flanked by <scene name='83/839914/Cv/6'>Cys-rich regions</scene> (in yellow), 2 immunoglobulin-like domains and the nerve growth factor (NGF) binding domain. | ||
| + | *[[Neurotrophin|Neurotrophin & its receptor]] | ||
| + | The complex between NT3 and p75 neurotrophin receptor (p75NTR) shows a <scene name='80/805035/Cv/2'>homodimer of NT3 with two symmetrically arranged p75NTR molecules</scene>. There are 3 sites of interactions between NT3 and p75NTR - site 1, site 2 and site 3. | ||
| + | |||
| + | <scene name='80/805035/Cv/3'>Site 1</scene>. | ||
| + | |||
| + | <scene name='80/805035/Cv/4'>Site 2</scene>. | ||
| + | |||
| + | <scene name='80/805035/Cv/5'>Site 3</scene>. | ||
| + | |||
| + | *[[TrkB tyrosine kinase receptor]] | ||
| + | <scene name='80/805008/Cv/6'>Structure of the TrkB-d5:NT-4/5 Complex, comprising one homodimer of NT-4/5 bound to two monomers of TrkB-d5</scene>. TrkB and neutrotrophin-4/5 interact via a <scene name='80/805008/Cv/7'>specificity interaction site</scene> and via a <scene name='80/805008/Cv/8'>conserved interaction site</scene> | ||
==[[Insulin-like growth factor receptor]]== | ==[[Insulin-like growth factor receptor]]== | ||
| + | Memory-Enhancement by Traditional Chinese Medicine? <ref>doi 10.1080/07391102.2012.741052</ref> | ||
| + | <scene name='Journal:JBSD:38/Cv/3'>IGF receptor </scene> (IGF-IR, in darkmagenta) activation is critical for IGF-I to elicit desirable cognitive functions. Molecular dynamics simulation revealed that the Traditional Chinese medicine (TCM) ligands were secured at the opening of the IGF-IR binding site for the duration of the MD. <scene name='Journal:JBSD:38/Cv/7'>3-(2-carboxyphenyl)-4(3H)-quinazolinone</scene> was stabilized by <scene name='Journal:JBSD:38/Cv/8'>Asp1056</scene>, <scene name='Journal:JBSD:38/Cv/9'>(+)-N-methyllaurotetanine</scene> was stabilized by <scene name='Journal:JBSD:38/Cv/10'>Leu975 and Asp1056</scene>, and <scene name='Journal:JBSD:38/Cv/11'>(+)-1(R)-Coclaurine</scene> was stabilized by <scene name='Journal:JBSD:38/Cv/12'>Leu975 and Gly1055</scene> (key residues are colored in yellow). | ||
</StructureSection> | </StructureSection> | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
Current revision
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References
- ↑ Segaliny AI, Tellez-Gabriel M, Heymann MF, Heymann D. Receptor tyrosine kinases: Characterisation, mechanism of action and therapeutic interests for bone cancers. J Bone Oncol. 2015 Jan 23;4(1):1-12. doi: 10.1016/j.jbo.2015.01.001. eCollection , 2015 Mar. PMID:26579483 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbo.2015.01.001
- ↑ Wu J, Tseng YD, Xu CF, Neubert TA, White MF, Hubbard SR. Structural and biochemical characterization of the KRLB region in insulin receptor substrate-2. Nat Struct Mol Biol. 2008 Mar;15(3):251-8. Epub 2008 Feb 17. PMID:18278056 doi:10.1038/nsmb.1388
- ↑ Petersen MC, Madiraju AK, Gassaway BM, Marcel M, Nasiri AR, Butrico G, Marcucci MJ, Zhang D, Abulizi A, Zhang XM, Philbrick W, Hubbard SR, Jurczak MJ, Samuel VT, Rinehart J, Shulman GI. Insulin receptor Thr1160 phosphorylation mediates lipid-induced hepatic insulin resistance. J Clin Invest. 2016 Nov 1;126(11):4361-4371. doi: 10.1172/JCI86013. Epub 2016 Oct, 17. PMID:27760050 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1172/JCI86013
- ↑ Schiering N, Knapp S, Marconi M, Flocco MM, Cui J, Perego R, Rusconi L, Cristiani C. Crystal structure of the tyrosine kinase domain of the hepatocyte growth factor receptor c-Met and its complex with the microbial alkaloid K-252a. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Oct 28;100(22):12654-9. Epub 2003 Oct 14. PMID:14559966 doi:10.1073/pnas.1734128100
- ↑ Schiering N, Knapp S, Marconi M, Flocco MM, Cui J, Perego R, Rusconi L, Cristiani C. Crystal structure of the tyrosine kinase domain of the hepatocyte growth factor receptor c-Met and its complex with the microbial alkaloid K-252a. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Oct 28;100(22):12654-9. Epub 2003 Oct 14. PMID:14559966 doi:10.1073/pnas.1734128100
- ↑ Schiering N, Knapp S, Marconi M, Flocco MM, Cui J, Perego R, Rusconi L, Cristiani C. Crystal structure of the tyrosine kinase domain of the hepatocyte growth factor receptor c-Met and its complex with the microbial alkaloid K-252a. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2003 Oct 28;100(22):12654-9. Epub 2003 Oct 14. PMID:14559966 doi:10.1073/pnas.1734128100
- ↑ Himanen JP, Yermekbayeva L, Janes PW, Walker JR, Xu K, Atapattu L, Rajashankar KR, Mensinga A, Lackmann M, Nikolov DB, Dhe-Paganon S. Architecture of Eph receptor clusters. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2010 May 26. PMID:20505120
- ↑ Canning P, Tan L, Chu K, Lee SW, Gray NS, Bullock AN. Structural mechanisms determining inhibition of the collagen receptor DDR1 by selective and multi-targeted type II kinase inhibitors. J Mol Biol. 2014 Apr 22. pii: S0022-2836(14)00198-3. doi:, 10.1016/j.jmb.2014.04.014. PMID:24768818 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2014.04.014
- ↑ Hung IC, Chang SS, Chang PC, Lee CC, Chen CY. Memory enhancement by traditional Chinese medicine? J Biomol Struct Dyn. 2012 Dec 19. PMID:23249175 doi:10.1080/07391102.2012.741052
