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Molecular requirements for assembly and function of a minimized human integrin alphaIIbbeta3.

Reference
McKay, B S, Annis, D S, Honda, S, Christie, D, Kunicki, T J. Molecular requirements for assembly and function of a minimized human integrin alphaIIbbeta3. J Biol Chem. 1996;271(48):30544-7.
PubMed
Abstract

Integrin subunit compatibility within and between species plays a major role in heterodimer assembly and ligand specificity. As an example, human alphaIIb pairs only with human beta3 and does not assemble a heterodimer with beta3 from other species. We use interspecies subunit chimeras to identify molecular requirements for subunit compatibility and show that species-restricted heterodimer assembly depends on a unique hexapeptide VGSDNH in an extended loop of the hypothetical human beta3 MIDAS domain. This allows us to express alphaIIb(1-233) and beta3(111-318) as a soluble, mini-integrin that retains RGD-dependent ligand recognition. Thus, in the case of one integrin, alphaIIbbeta3, the molecular requirements for integrin subunit compatibility and ligand recognition are intimately related.