The cytokine Spätzle is the ligand for Drosophila Toll, the prototype of an important family of membrane receptors that function in embryonic patterning and innate immunity. A dimeric precursor of Spätzle is processed by an endoprotease to produce a form (C-106) that cross-links Toll receptor ectodomains and establishes signaling. Here we show that before processing the pro-domain of Spätzle is required for correct biosynthesis and secretion. We mapped two loss-of-function mutations of Spätzle to a discrete site in the pro-domain and showed that the phenotype arises because of a defect in biosynthesis rather than signaling. We also report that the pro-domain and C-106 remain associated after cleavage and that this processed complex signals with the same characteristics as the C-terminal fragment. These results suggest that before activation the determinants on C-106 that bind specifically to Toll are sequestered by the pro-domain and that proteolytic processing causes conformational rearrangements that expose these determinants and enables binding to Toll. Furthermore, we show that the pro-domain is released when the Toll extracellular domain binds to the complex, a finding that has implications for the generation of a signaling-competent Toll dimer. © 2007 by The American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Inc.
CITATION STYLE
Weber, A. N. R., Gangloff, M., Moncrieffe, M. C., Hyvert, Y., Imler, J. L., & Gay, N. J. (2007). Role of the spätzle pro-domain in the generation of an active toll receptor ligand. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 282(18), 13522–13531. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M700068200
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