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Talin and kindlin use integrin tail allostery and direct binding to activate integrins

Jonas Aretz, Masood Aziz, Nico Strohmeyer, Michael Sattler, Reinhard Fässler

2023Nature Structural & Molecular Biology42 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Integrin affinity regulation, also termed integrin activation, is essential for metazoan life. Although talin and kindlin binding to the β-integrin cytoplasmic tail is indispensable for integrin activation, it is unknown how they achieve this function. By combining NMR, biochemistry and cell biology techniques, we found that talin and kindlin binding to the β-tail can induce a conformational change that increases talin affinity and decreases kindlin affinity toward it. We also discovered that this asymmetric affinity regulation is accompanied by a direct interaction between talin and kindlin, which promotes simultaneous binding of talin and kindlin to β-tails. Disrupting allosteric communication between the β-tail-binding sites of talin and kindlin or their direct interaction in cells severely compromised integrin functions. These data show how talin and kindlin cooperate to generate a small but critical population of ternary talin-β-integrin-kindlin complexes with high talin-integrin affinity and high dynamics.

Topics & Concepts

IntegrinAllosteric regulationCell biologyCytoplasmPlasma protein bindingChemistryIntegrin, beta 6BiologyBiochemistryCellReceptorCell Adhesion Molecules ResearchSignaling Pathways in DiseaseBiochemical and Structural Characterization
Talin and kindlin use integrin tail allostery and direct binding to activate integrins | Litcius