Journal of Biological Chemistry
Volume 285, Issue 34, 20 August 2010, Pages 26697-26709
Journal home page for Journal of Biological Chemistry

Cell Biology
Identification of the Residues in the Extracellular Domain of Thrombopoietin Receptor Involved in the Binding of Thrombopoietin and a Nuclear Distribution Protein (Human NUDC)*

https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.M110.120956Get rights and content
Under a Creative Commons license
open access

Thrombopoietin (TPO) and its receptor (Mpl) have long been associated with megakaryocyte proliferation, differentiation, and platelet formation. However, studies have also shown that the extracellular domain of Mpl (Mpl-EC) interacts with human (h) NUDC, a protein previously characterized as a human homolog of a fungal nuclear migration protein. This study was undertaken to further delineate the putative binding domain on the Mpl receptor. Using the yeast two-hybrid system assay and co-immunoprecipitation, we identified that within the Mpl-EC domain 1 (Mpl-EC-D1), amino acids 102–251 were strongly involved in ligand binding. We subsequently expressed five subdomains within this region with T7 phage display. Enzyme-linked immunosorbent binding assays identified a short stretch of peptide located between residues 206 and 251 as the minimum binding domain for both TPO and hNUDC. A series of sequential Ala replacement mutations in the region were subsequently used to identify the specific residues most involved in ligand binding. Our results point to two hydrophobic residues, Leu228 and Leu230, as having substantial effects on hNUDC binding. For TPO binding, mutations in residues Asp235 and Leu239 had the largest effect on binding efficacy. In addition, deletion of the conservative motif WGSWS reduced binding capacity for hNUDC but not for TPO. These separate binding sites on the Mpl receptor for TPO and hNUDC raise interesting implications for the cytokine-receptor interactions.

Amino Acid
Cytokine
Mutant
Protein-Protein Interactions
Receptor Structure-Function
Mutagenesis
Protein Binding
TPO
Thrombopoietin Receptor (Mpl)
hNUDC

Cited by (0)

*

This work was supported by National Natural Science Foundation of China Grant 30971069, National High-Tech Research and Development Program of China Grant 2007AA21009, and Guang Dong National High-Tech Research and Development Program 2007B030702002.