Title: Band 4.1 and ERM Proteins
1Band 4.1 and ERM Proteins
- Weiwei Chen
- Michele Kadnar
- Kwame Osei-Sarfo
- Rebecca Wendland
2Band 4.1 Superfamily
- Highly conserved domain FERM (4.1-ezrin, radixin,
moesin) - Based on cDNA/protein sequences
- Band 4.1 protein
- ERM (ezrin/radixin/moesin)
- Merlin (schwannomin)
- FERM-PTP
(protein tyrosine phosphatase) - NBLs (novel band 4.1-like proteins)
- Talin
Pearson et al., 2000
3Band 4.1 ERM
- Sequence similarity compared to human ezrin
FERM ?-domain CTD
Human band 4.1
NH2-
32 8 15
ERMs
- Differences
- - Band 4.1, unique conserved CTD, function
in nucleus - less conserved SABD
(spectrin/actin binding domain) - - ERM, CTD interact with actin have some
different membrane binding proteins
intramolecular regulation - Commonalities
- - structure, some binding partners, some
functions
4Band 4.1 family
- 4.1 R hematopoietic tissues, erythrocyte
- 4.1 G multiple tissues
- 4.1 N brain (neurons)
- 4.1 B brain
- Coracle Drosophila, C. elegans epithelial
tissues
5Band 4.1 traditional functions
CaM and phosphorylation regulation - cell
morphological dynamic
Bennett V and Baines AJ, 2001
6Interacting proteins emerging functions
p55(MAGUK)
spectrin, actin
Band 3
Lobe 3
Lobe 1
PIP2
NuMA (nuclear mitotic apparatus protein), FKBP13
(immunophilin)
glycophorin C, neurexins, syndecan,
CD44
Lobe 2
calmodulin
human discs-large
7ERM Family of Proteins
- 4.1 superfamily
- Members
- Protein 4.1
- Ezrin, radixin, moesin
- Merlin/Schwannomin
- ERM identity
- gt80 NTD
- gt60 overall
- Merlin identity
- - 46 identity with ERMs
NTD
CTD
?-helix
FERM Domain
Louvet-Vallee, 2000
8ERM Function
- Membrane Organization-Interaction with PM and
actin cytoskeleton - Attach actin filaments to PM maintaining cell
shape - Cell communication
- Cluster ion channels and receptors
- Membrane dynamics
- Form cell surface structures, i.e. membrane
ruffles - Involved in cell-adhesion
- Membrane trafficking
- Tumor suppression
- Merlin -neurofibramatosis tumor suppressor
9 ERM Distribution
- In vivo tissue-specific pattern
- Ezrin- intestine, stomach, lung, kidney
epithelial and mesothelial cells - Moesin- lung, spleen endothelial cells
- Radixin- liver, intestine
- Merlin- heart, brain, lung, liver, skeletal
muscle - All concentrated in actin-rich surface
structures, i.e. microvilli, membrane ruffles,
filopodia - Merlin mutation is tumorigenic
- ERMs functions are redundant in whole body
system - Moesin KO is not lethal, normal phenotype
- No implication in cell proliferation phenotype
10ERM Family Binding Partners
- N-term, via FERM domain, binds to the cytoplasmic
face of several transmembrane glycoproteins - C-term binds to actin filaments
- N-term highly conserved
FERM
CTD
11Direct vs Indirect Binding to TM Proteins
- NTD can bind directly to TM protein
- NTD has binding site for NHE-RF (EBP-50)
- NHF-RF is ion exchanger
- NHE-RF interacts with proteins via PDZ domain
- Widely distributed in polarized epithelia
- Indirect binding offers another level of
regulation
Ezrin Moesin
NHE-RF (EBP-50)
Direct Binding
Indirect Binding
12Conformational dependence
- Actin-binding region resides in CTD tail
- Conformational dependence-
- Inactive-folded
- Active- extended
- CTD has extended peptide that masks the FERM
domain - CTD has residues that allow the FERM domain to
complete folding
Pearson, 2000
13Regulation
- Intracellular and extracellular signals
- Change from inactive to active conformation
- phosphorylation by EGF receptor of ERM
serine/threonine residues weakens the CTD/FERM
interaction - PIP2 binds to NTD suppressing the interaction of
CTD/FERM - Extended (active) conformation is a novel
mechanism for producing varying levels of
activation
14Rho signaling pathway
- Rho can regulate actin-based cytoskeletal
organization - activated by G-protein coupled receptors
- activates several serine/threonine kinases
- activates PI4P5K activating PIP2
- Positive feedback system
Louvet-Vallee, 2000