6kr4
From Proteopedia
Crystal structure of the liprin-alpha3_SAM123/LAR_D1D2 complex
Structural highlights
Function[PTPRF_HUMAN] Possible cell adhesion receptor. It possesses an intrinsic protein tyrosine phosphatase activity (PTPase).[1] The first PTPase domain has enzymatic activity, while the second one seems to affect the substrate specificity of the first one.[2] [LIPA3_MOUSE] May regulate the disassembly of focal adhesions. May localize receptor-like tyrosine phosphatases type 2A at specific sites on the plasma membrane, possibly regulating their interaction with the extracellular environment and their association with substrates (By similarity). Publication Abstract from PubMedLeukocyte common antigen-related receptor protein tyrosine phosphatases (LAR-RPTPs) are cell adhesion molecules involved in mediating neuronal development. The binding of LAR-RPTPs to extracellular ligands induces local clustering of LAR-RPTPs to regulate axon growth and synaptogenesis. LAR-RPTPs interact with synaptic liprin-alpha proteins via the two cytoplasmic phosphatase domains, D1 and D2. Here we solve the crystal structure of LAR_D1D2 in complex with the SAM repeats of liprin-alpha3, uncovering a conserved two-site binding mode. Cellular analysis shows that liprin-alphas robustly promote clustering of LAR in cells by both the liprin-alpha/LAR interaction and the oligomerization of liprin-alpha. Structural analysis reveals a unique homophilic interaction of LAR via the catalytically active D1 domains. Disruption of the D1/D1 interaction diminishes the liprin-alpha-promoted LAR clustering and increases tyrosine dephosphorylation, demonstrating that the phosphatase activity of LAR is negatively regulated by forming clusters. Additionally, we find that the binding of LAR to liprin-alpha allosterically regulates the liprin-alpha/liprin-beta interaction. Structural basis of liprin-alpha-promoted LAR-RPTP clustering for modulation of phosphatase activity.,Xie X, Luo L, Liang M, Zhang W, Zhang T, Yu C, Wei Z Nat Commun. 2020 Jan 10;11(1):169. doi: 10.1038/s41467-019-13949-x. PMID:31924785[3] From MEDLINE®/PubMed®, a database of the U.S. National Library of Medicine. References
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