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Publication : A Dock-and-Lock Mechanism Clusters ADAM10 at Cell-Cell Junctions to Promote α-Toxin Cytotoxicity.

First Author  Shah J Year  2018
Journal  Cell Rep Volume  25
Issue  8 Pages  2132-2147.e7
PubMed ID  30463011 Mgi Jnum  J:276415
Mgi Id  MGI:6316557 Doi  10.1016/j.celrep.2018.10.088
Citation  Shah J, et al. (2018) A Dock-and-Lock Mechanism Clusters ADAM10 at Cell-Cell Junctions to Promote alpha-Toxin Cytotoxicity. Cell Rep 25(8):2132-2147.e7
abstractText  We previously identified PLEKHA7 and other junctional proteins as host factors mediating death by S. aureus alpha-toxin, but the mechanism through which junctions promote toxicity was unclear. Using cell biological and biochemical methods, we now show that ADAM10 is docked to junctions by its transmembrane partner Tspan33, whose cytoplasmic C terminus binds to the WW domain of PLEKHA7 in the presence of PDZD11. ADAM10 is locked at junctions through binding of its cytoplasmic C terminus to afadin. Junctionally clustered ADAM10 supports the efficient formation of stable toxin pores. Instead, disruption of the PLEKHA7-PDZD11 complex inhibits ADAM10 and toxin junctional clustering. This promotes toxin pore removal from the cell surface through an actin- and macropinocytosis-dependent process, resulting in cell recovery from initial injury and survival. These results uncover a dock-and-lock molecular mechanism to target ADAM10 to junctions and provide a paradigm for how junctions regulate transmembrane receptors through their clustering.
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