New insights into FAK structure and function in focal adhesions

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Abstract

Focal adhesion kinase (FAK; also known as PTK2) was discovered three decades ago and is now recognised as a key player in the regulation of cell–matrix adhesion and mesenchymal cell migration. Although it is essential during development, FAK also drives invasive cancer progression and metastasis. On a structural level, the basic building blocks of FAK have been described for some time. However, a picture of how FAK integrates into larger assemblies in various cellular environments, including one of its main cellular locations, the focal adhesion (FA) complex, is only beginning to emerge. Nanoresolution data from cellular studies, as well as atomic structures from reconstituted systems, have provided first insights, but also point to challenges that remain for obtaining a full structural understanding of how FAK is integrated in the FA complex and the structural changes occurring at different stages of FA maturation. In this Review, we discuss the known structural features of FAK, the interactions with its partners within the FA environment on the cell membrane and propose how its initial assembly in nascent FAs might change during FA maturation under force.

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Le Coq, J., Acebrón, I., Martin, B. R., Navajas, P. L., & Lietha, D. (2022, October 1). New insights into FAK structure and function in focal adhesions. Journal of Cell Science. Company of Biologists Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1242/jcs.259089

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