Kinetic analysis of the binding of monomeric and dimeric ephrins to Eph receptors: Correlation to function in a growth cone collapse assay Journal Article


Authors: Pabbisetty, K. B.; Yue, X.; Li, C.; Himanen, J. P.; Zhou, R.; Nikolov, D. B.; Hu, L.
Article Title: Kinetic analysis of the binding of monomeric and dimeric ephrins to Eph receptors: Correlation to function in a growth cone collapse assay
Abstract: Eph receptors and ephrins play important roles in regulating cell migration and positioning during both normal and oncogenic tissue development. Using a surface plasma resonance (SPR) biosensor, we examined the binding kinetics of representative monomeric and dimeric ephrins to their corresponding Eph receptors and correlated the apparent binding affinity with their functional activity in a neuronal growth cone collapse assay. Our results indicate that the Eph receptor binding of dimeric ephrins, formed through fusion with disulfide-linked Fc fragments, is best described using a bivalent analyte model as a two-step process involving an initial monovalent 2:1 binding followed by a second bivalent 2:2 binding. The bivalent binding dramatically decreases the apparent dissociation rate constants with little effect on the initial association rate constants, resulting in a 30-to 6000-fold decrease in apparent equilibrium dissociation constants for the binding of dimeric ephrins to Eph receptors relative to their monomeric counterparts. Interestingly, the change was more prominent in the A-class ephrin/Eph interactions than in the B-class of ephrins to Eph receptors. The increase in apparent binding affinities correlated well with increased activation of Eph receptors and the resulting growth cone collapse. Our kinetic analysis and correlation of binding affinity with function helped us better understand the interactions between ephrins and Eph receptors and should be useful in the design of inhibitors that interfere with the interactions. Published by Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press. Copyright © 2007 The Protein Society.
Keywords: controlled study; nonhuman; binding affinity; animals; mice; animal tissue; embryo; cell line; protein interaction; correlation analysis; kinetics; rat; dimerization; rats; receptor affinity; surface plasmon resonance; receptor, ephb2; receptor binding; molecular model; ephrin; hippocampus; dissociation constant; growth cones; ephrin-a5; ephrin receptor; biosensing techniques; binding kinetics; equilibrium constant; eph receptor; growth cone collapse; receptor dimerization; immunoglobulin fc fragment; ephrin-b2; receptor, epha3
Journal Title: Protein Science
Volume: 16
Issue: 3
ISSN: 0961-8368
Publisher: Wiley Blackwell  
Date Published: 2007-03-01
Start Page: 355
End Page: 361
Language: English
DOI: 10.1110/ps.062608807
PUBMED: 17322526
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC2203307
DOI/URL:
Notes: --- - "Cited By (since 1996): 15" - "Export Date: 17 November 2011" - "CODEN: PRCIE" - "Source: Scopus"
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  1. Dimitar B Nikolov
    86 Nikolov
  2. Juha P Himanen
    50 Himanen
  3. Chen Li
    4 Li