Angiopoietins have distinct modular domains essential for receptor binding, dimerization and superclustering

S Davis, N Papadopoulos, TH Aldrich… - Nature structural …, 2003 - nature.com
S Davis, N Papadopoulos, TH Aldrich, PC Maisonpierre, T Huang, L Kovac, A Xu, R Leidich…
Nature structural biology, 2003nature.com
Angiopoietins are a recently discovered family of angiogenic factors that interact with the
endothelial receptor tyrosine kinase Tie2, either as agonists (angiopoietin-1) or as context-
dependent agonists/antagonists (angiopoietin-2). Here we show that angiopoietin-1 has a
modular structure unlike any previously characterized growth factor. This modular structure
consists of a receptor-binding domain, a dimerization motif and a superclustering motif that
forms variable-sized multimers. Genetic engineering of precise multimers of the receptor …
Abstract
Angiopoietins are a recently discovered family of angiogenic factors that interact with the endothelial receptor tyrosine kinase Tie2, either as agonists (angiopoietin-1) or as context-dependent agonists/antagonists (angiopoietin-2). Here we show that angiopoietin-1 has a modular structure unlike any previously characterized growth factor. This modular structure consists of a receptor-binding domain, a dimerization motif and a superclustering motif that forms variable-sized multimers. Genetic engineering of precise multimers of the receptor-binding domain of angiopoietin-1, using surrogate multimerization motifs, reveals that tetramers are the minimal size required for activating endothelial Tie2 receptors. In contrast, engineered dimers can antagonize endothelial Tie2 receptors. Surprisingly, angiopoietin-2 has a modular structure and multimerization state similar to that of angiopoietin-1, and its antagonist activity seems to be a subtle property encoded in its receptor-binding domain.
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