Homology with vesicle fusion mediator syntaxin-1a predicts determinants of epimorphin/syntaxin-2 function inmammary epithelial morphogenesis

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Abstract

We have shown that branching morphogenesis of mammary ductal structures requires the action of the morphogen epimorphin/syntaxin-2. Epimorphin, originally identified as an extracellular molecule, is identical to syntaxin-2, an intracellular molecule that is a member of the extensively investigated syntaxin family of proteins that mediate vesicle trafficking. We show here that, although epimorphin/syntaxin-2 is highly homologous to syntaxin-1a, only epimorphin/syntaxin-2 can stimulate mammary branching morphogenesis. We construct a homology model of epimorphin/syntaxin-2 based on the published structure of syntaxin-1a, and we use this model to identify the structural motif responsible for the morphogenic activity. We identify four residues located within the cleft between helices B and C that differ between syntaxin-1a and epimorphin/syntaxin-2; through site-directed mutagenesis of these four amino acids, we confer the properties of epimorphin for cell adhesion, gene activation, and branching morphogenesis onto the inactive syntaxin-1a template. These results provide a dramatic demonstration of the use of structural information about one molecule to define a functional motif of a second molecule that is related at the sequence level but highly divergent functionally.

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Chen, C. S., Nelson, C. M., Khauv, D., Bennett, S., Radisky, E. S., Hirai, Y., … Radisky, D. C. (2009). Homology with vesicle fusion mediator syntaxin-1a predicts determinants of epimorphin/syntaxin-2 function inmammary epithelial morphogenesis. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 284(11), 6877–6884. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M805908200

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