A recombinant fragment of the human receptor for epidermal growth factor containing both its extracellular domain and its membrane-spanning segment, when dissolved with Triton X-100, was observed to dimerize in response to addition of epidermal growth factor (EGF) even at the lowest concentration of this fragment that could be assayed (4 nM). Consequently, the dissociation constant for the dimer of this fragment is at least 10,000-fold smaller than that for dimers of soluble, recombinant forms of the extracellular domain lacking the membrane-spanning segment. The second-order rate constant for dimerization of the fragment containing the extracellular domain and the membrane-spanning segment was estimated to be greater than 0.3 nM-1 min-1, more than 10-fold that of the native enzyme under the same conditions. This result suggests that the cytoplasmic domain of the intact enzyme sterically hinders its dimerization. When EGF is removed from the dimer of the fragment, the rate constant for its dissociation is greater than 0.2 min-1, more than 40-fold that of the native enzyme. This result suggests that interfaces between cytoplasmic domains of intact EGF receptor impart significant stabilization to the dimer of the enzyme.
CITATION STYLE
Tanner, K. G., & Kyte, J. (1999). Dimerization of the extracellular domain of the receptor for epidermal growth factor containing the membrane-spanning segment in response to treatment with epidermal growth factor. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 274(50), 35985–35990. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.274.50.35985
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