Structures of Teneurin adhesion receptors reveal an ancient fold for cell-cell interaction

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Abstract

Teneurins are ancient cell-cell adhesion receptors that are vital for brain development and synapse organisation. They originated in early metazoan evolution through a horizontal gene transfer event when a bacterial YD-repeat toxin fused to a eukaryotic receptor. We present X-ray crystallography and cryo-EM structures of two Teneurins, revealing a ~200 kDa extracellular super-fold in which eight sub-domains form an intricate structure centred on a spiralling YD-repeat shell. An alternatively spliced loop, which is implicated in homophilic Teneurin interaction and specificity, is exposed and thus poised for interaction. The N-terminal side of the shell is 'plugged' via a fibronectin-plug domain combination, which defines a new class of YD proteins. Unexpectedly, we find that these proteins are widespread amongst modern bacteria, suggesting early metazoan receptor evolution from a distinct class of proteins, which today includes both bacterial proteins and eukaryotic Teneurins.

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Jackson, V. A., Meijer, D. H., Carrasquero, M., Van Bezouwen, L. S., Lowe, E. D., Kleanthous, C., … Seiradake, E. (2018). Structures of Teneurin adhesion receptors reveal an ancient fold for cell-cell interaction. Nature Communications, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-018-03460-0

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