ErbB Tyrosine Kinases and the Two Neuregulin Families Constitute a Ligand-Receptor Network
Author(s) -
Ronit PinkasKramarski,
Maya Shelly,
Bradley C. Guarino,
Ling Mei Wang,
Ljuba Lyass,
Iris Alroy,
Mauricio Alamandi,
Angera H. Kuo,
James D. Moyer,
Sara Lavi,
Miriam Eisenstein,
Barry Ratzkin,
Rony Seger,
Sarah Bacus,
Jacalyn H. Pierce,
Glenn C. Andrews,
Yosef Yarden
Publication year - 1998
Publication title -
molecular and cellular biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.14
H-Index - 327
eISSN - 1067-8824
pISSN - 0270-7306
DOI - 10.1128/mcb.18.10.6090
Subject(s) - erbb , neuregulin , biology , receptor tyrosine kinase , receptor protein tyrosine kinases , neuregulin 1 , tyrosine kinase , microbiology and biotechnology , tropomyosin receptor kinase c , receptor , signal transduction , biochemistry , platelet derived growth factor receptor , growth factor
The recently isolated second family of neuregulins, NRG2, shares its primary receptors, ErbB-3 and ErbB-4, and induction of mammary cell differentiation with NRG1 isoforms, suggesting functional redundancy of the two growth factor families. To address this possibility, we analyzed receptor specificity of NRGs by using an engineered cellular system. The activity of isoform-specific but partly overlapping patterns of specificities that collectively activate all eight ligand-stimulatable ErbB dimers was revealed. Specifically, NRG2-alpha [corrected], like NRG1-beta [corrected], emerges as a narrow-specificity ligand, whereas NRG2-beta [corrected] is a pan-ErbB ligand that binds with different affinities to all receptor combinations, including those containing ErbB-1, but excluding homodimers of ErbB-2. The latter protein, however, displayed cooperativity with the direct NRG receptors. Apparently, signaling by all NRGs is funneled through the mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK). However, the duration and potency of MAPK activation depend on the identity of the stimulatory ligand-receptor ternary complex. We conclude that the NRG-ErbB network represents a complex and nonredundant machinery developed for fine-tuning of signal transduction.
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