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.
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.
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