CDB15:0000003 ADAM10 — EPHA3

Experimentally validated in Human, Mixed species; Orthology-inferred in Human, Mouse, Rat, Frog, Zebrafish, Chicken, Macaque, Pig, Dog, Cow, Chimp, Horse, Marmoset, Sheep

Title

Journal:; Year Published:

Abstract

Adam meets Eph: an ADAM substrate recognition module acts as a molecular switch for ephrin cleavage in trans.

Cell, 2005; PubMed, Bos taurus ADAM10 — Mus Musculus Epha3
ABSTRACT: The Eph family of receptor tyrosine kinases and their ephrin ligands are mediators of cell-cell communication. Cleavage of ephrin-A2 by the ADAM10 membrane metalloprotease enables contact repulsion between Eph- and ephrin-expressing cells. How ADAM10 interacts with ephrins in a regulated manner to cleave only Eph bound ephrin molecules remains unclear. The structure of ADAM10 disintegrin and cysteine-rich domains and the functional studies presented here define an essential substrate-recognition module for functional interaction of ADAM10 with the ephrin-A5/EphA3 complex. While ADAM10 constitutively associates with EphA3, the formation of a functional EphA3/ephrin-A5 complex creates a new molecular recognition motif for the ADAM10 cysteine-rich domain that positions the proteinase domain for effective ephrin-A5 cleavage. Surprisingly, the cleavage occurs in trans, with ADAM10 and its substrate being on the membranes of opposing cells. Our data suggest a simple mechanism for regulating ADAM10-mediated ephrin proteolysis, which ensures that only Eph bound ephrins are recognized and cleaved.

Cytoplasmic relaxation of active Eph controls ephrin shedding by ADAM10.

PLoS biology, 2009; PubMed, Homo sapiens ADAM10 — Homo sapiens EPHA3
ABSTRACT: Release of cell surface-bound ligands by A-Disintegrin-And-Metalloprotease (ADAM) transmembrane metalloproteases is essential for signalling by cytokine, cell adhesion, and tyrosine kinase receptors. For Eph receptor ligands, it provides the switch between cell-cell adhesion and repulsion. Ligand shedding is tightly controlled by intrinsic tyrosine kinase activity, which for Eph receptors relies on the release of an inhibitory interaction of the cytoplasmic juxtamembrane segment with the kinase domain. However, a mechanism linking kinase and sheddase activities had remained elusive. We demonstrate that it is a membrane-proximal localisation of the latent kinase domain that prevents ephrin ligand shedding in trans. Fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy and electron tomography reveal that activation extends the Eph receptor tyrosine kinase intracellular domain away from the cell membrane into a conformation that facilitates productive association with ADAM10. Accordingly, EphA3 mutants with constitutively-released kinase domains efficiently support shedding, even when their kinase is disabled. Our data suggest that this phosphorylation-activated conformational switch of EphA3 directly controls ADAM-mediated shedding.
Basic Information on ADAM10
Ligand Name: ADAM metallopeptidase domain 10
Other Symbols: kuz, MADM, HsT18717, CD156C
Ligand Location: cell membrane based on hpa, perplexity, uniprot
HGNC Gene Symbol Report: ADAM10
GeneCards: ADAM10
Interactions with other Receptors for ADAM10
Basic Information on EPHA3
Receptor Name: EPH receptor A3
Other Symbols: ETK, ETK1, TYRO4, HEK, HEK4
Receptor Location: cell membrane based on hpa, perplexity, uniprot
Interactions with other Ligands for EPHA3