Title of article :
Structural Model of Human Endoglin, a Transmembrane Receptor Responsible for Hereditary Hemorrhagic Telangiectasia
Author/Authors :
Laurence H. Pearl and Oscar Llorca، نويسنده , , Arturo Trujillo، نويسنده , , Francisco J. Blanco، نويسنده , , Carmelo Bernabeu، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
12
From page :
694
To page :
705
Abstract :
Endoglin is a type I membrane protein expressed as a disulphide-linked homodimer on human vascular endothelial cells whose haploinsufficiency is responsible for the dominant vascular dysplasia known as hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia (HHT). Structurally, endoglin belongs to the zona pellucida (ZP) family of proteins that share a ZP domain of ∼ 260 amino acid residues at their extracellular region. Endoglin is a component of the TGF-β receptor complex, interacts with the TGF-β signalling receptors types I and II, and modulates cellular responses to TGF-β. Here, we have determined for the first time the three-dimensional structure of the ∼ 140 kDa extracellular domain of endoglin at 25 Å resolution, using single-particle electron microscopy (EM). This reconstruction provides the general architecture of endoglin, which arranges as a dome made of antiparallel oriented monomers enclosing a cavity at one end. A high-resolution structure of endoglin has also been modelled de novo and found to be consistent with the experimental reconstruction. Each subunit comprises three well-defined domains, two of them corresponding to ZP regions, organised into an open U-shaped monomer. This domain arrangement was found to closely resemble the overall structure derived experimentally and the three modelled de novo domains were tentatively assigned to the domains observed in the EM reconstruction. This molecular model was further tested by tagging endoglinʹs C terminus with an IgG Fc fragment visible after 3D reconstruction of the labelled protein. Combined, these data provide the structural framework to interpret endoglinʹs functional domains and mutations found in HHT patients.
Keywords :
HHT disorder , Electron microscopy , 3D RECONSTRUCTION , Endoglin , TGF-?
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Journal of Molecular Biology
Record number :
1248924
Link To Document :
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