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Ligand-induced type II interleukin-4 receptor dimers are sustained by rapid re-association within plasma membrane microcompartments
Author(s) -
David Richter,
Ignacio Moraga,
Hauke Winkelmann,
Oliver Birkholz,
Stephan Wilmes,
Markos Schulte,
Michael Kraich,
Hella Kenneweg,
Oliver Beutel,
Philipp Selenschik,
Dirk Paterok,
Martynas Gavutis,
Thomas Schmidt,
K. Christopher García,
T. Müller,
Jacob Piehler
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
nature communications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.559
H-Index - 365
ISSN - 2041-1723
DOI - 10.1038/ncomms15976
Subject(s) - receptor , biophysics , ligand (biochemistry) , interleukin 13 receptor , cytokine receptor , chemistry , endosome , interleukin 4 receptor , enzyme linked receptor , cell surface receptor , microbiology and biotechnology , receptor–ligand kinetics , interleukin 21 receptor , biology , biochemistry , insulin like growth factor 1 receptor , growth factor
The spatiotemporal organization of cytokine receptors in the plasma membrane is still debated with models ranging from ligand-independent receptor pre-dimerization to ligand-induced receptor dimerization occurring only after receptor uptake into endosomes. Here, we explore the molecular and cellular determinants governing the assembly of the type II interleukin-4 receptor, taking advantage of various agonists binding the receptor subunits with different affinities and rate constants. Quantitative kinetic studies using artificial membranes confirm that receptor dimerization is governed by the two-dimensional ligand–receptor interactions and identify a critical role of the transmembrane domain in receptor dimerization. Single molecule localization microscopy at physiological cell surface expression levels, however, reveals efficient ligand-induced receptor dimerization by all ligands, largely independent of receptor binding affinities, in line with the similar STAT6 activation potencies observed for all IL-4 variants. Detailed spatiotemporal analyses suggest that kinetic trapping of receptor dimers in actin-dependent microcompartments sustains robust receptor dimerization and signalling.

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