Abstract

Inside-out activation of integrins is mediated via the binding of talin and kindlin to integrin β-subunit cytoplasmic tails. The kindlin FERM domain is interrupted by a pleckstrin homology (PH) domain within its F2 subdomain. Here, we present data confirming the importance of the kindlin-1 PH domain for integrin activation and its x-ray crystal structure at a resolution of 2.1 Å revealing a C-terminal second α-helix integral to the domain but found only in the kindlin protein family. An isoform-specific salt bridge occludes the canonical phosphoinositide binding site, but molecular dynamics simulations display transient switching to an alternative open conformer. Molecular docking reveals that the opening of the pocket would enable potential ligands to bind within it. Although lipid overlay assays suggested the PH domain binds inositol monophosphates, surface plasmon resonance demonstrated weak affinities for inositol 3,4,5-triphosphate (Ins(3,4,5)P(3); K(D) ∼100 μM) and no monophosphate binding. Removing the salt bridge by site-directed mutagenesis increases the PH domain affinity for Ins(3,4,5)P(3) as measured by surface plasmon resonance and enables it to bind PtdIns(3,5)P(2) on a dot-blot. Structural comparison with other PH domains suggests that the phosphate binding pocket in the kindlin-1 PH domain is more occluded than in kindlins-2 and -3 due to its salt bridge. In addition, the apparent affinity for Ins(3,4,5)P(3) is affected by the presence of PO(4) ions in the buffer. We suggest the physiological ligand of the kindlin-1 PH domain is most likely not an inositol phosphate but another phosphorylated species.

Highlights

  • Kindlins are essential co-activators with talin of integrins

  • The pleckstrin homology (PH) Domain Is Important for Kindlin-1-mediated Integrin Activation—A defining feature of kindlins is the insertion of a predicted PH domain within a loop of the kindlin F2 subdomain

  • These data together with published data on kindlin-2 (3, 22, 24) show that the kindlin PH domain is important for kindlin-mediated integrin activation

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Summary

Background

Results: Kindlin-1 PH domain is necessary for integrin activation and has low affinity for PtdInsP species partly determined by a salt bridge across its binding pocket. The N-terminal F3 subdomain of talin is known to bind to the more membrane proximal NPXY (NPKY747 in ␤3 integrin) motif resulting in enhanced activation (2– 4). Kindlin-2 was shown to localize to PtdIns(3,4,5)P3-enriched membranes, and phosphoinositide binding-deficient kindlin-2 mutants were shown to impair podocyte integrin activation (25). This evidence suggests a molecular role for the kindlin-2 PH domain, differences in sequence to other isoforms suggest that other PH domains in the kindlin family may function distinctly. We investigated the structure of the kindlin-1 PH domain to provide a molecular description of the domain and, with additional structural analysis, some clues as to its function in kindlin-1 biology

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
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