CDB20:0002653 CD48 — CD2
Experimentally validated in Mouse, Rat; Orthology-inferred in Human, Mouse, Chicken, Macaque, Pig, Dog, Cow, Chimp, Horse, Marmoset, Sheep, Rat
Title
Journal:; Year Published:
Abstract
Direct measurements of heterotypic adhesion between the cell surface proteins CD2 and CD48.
Biochemistry, 2002; PubMed, Mus Musculus Cd48 — Mus Musculus Cd2
ABSTRACT: Direct force measurements were used to investigate the molecular mechanism of heterophilic adhesion between the murine T-cell adhesion glycoprotein CD2 and its ligand CD48. From the distance dependence of the protein-protein interaction potential, we demonstrate directly that the full-length extracellular domains adhere in a head-to-head orientation. The absence of long-range electrostatic protein-protein attraction further indicates that the salt bridges between the binding surfaces only influence the interaction at short range. Despite the loss of a stabilizing disulfide bond in domain 1 (D1) of CD2, adhesive failure occurs abruptly with no evidence of partial protein unfolding during detachment. Finally, these measurements between extended membrane surfaces directly confirm that the low-affinity CD2-CD48 bond generates weak adhesion and that lateral receptor mobility is required for the development of appreciable adhesion. This is the first direct measurement of the range and magnitude of the forces governing heterotypic adhesion mediated by cell surface proteins. These results both verified the head-to-head CD2-CD48 docking alignment and demonstrated the ability to elucidate the structure-function relationships of adhesion proteins from the measured distance dependence of their interaction potentials.
Rational design of a novel calcium-binding site adjacent to the ligand-binding site on CD2 increases its CD48 affinity.
Protein science : a publication of the Protein Society, 2008; PubMed, Rattus norvegicus Cd48 — Rattus norvegicus Cd2
ABSTRACT: Electrostatic interactions are important for molecular recognition processes including Ca2+-binding and cell adhesion. To understand these processes, we have successfully introduced a novel Ca2+-binding site into the non-Ca2+-dependent cell adhesion protein CD2 using our criteria that are specifically tailored to the structural and functional properties of the protein environment and charged adhesion surface. This designed site with ligand residues exclusively from the beta-sheets selectively binds to Ca2+ and Ln3+ over other mono- and divalent cations. While Ca2+ and Ln3+ binding specifically alters the local environment of the designed Ca2+-binding site, the designed protein undergoes a significantly smaller conformation change compared with those observed in naturally occurring Ca2+-binding sites that are composed of at least part of the flexible loop and helical regions. In addition, the CD2-CD48-binding affinity increased approximately threefold after protein engineering, suggesting that the cell adhesion of CD2 can be modulated by altering the local electrostatic environment. The study provides site-specific information for regulating cell adhesion within CD2 and gives insight into the structural factors required for Ca2+-modulated biological processes.