Publication | Open Access
Human epidermal growth factor
62
Citations
18
References
1990
Year
Drug TargetMolecular BiologyDermatologyConservative ChangeReceptor Tyrosine KinaseSite-directed MutagenesisBiochemistryG Protein-coupled ReceptorCutaneous BiologyReceptor (Biochemistry)PharmacologyHuman EgfSignal TransductionFunctional SelectivityNatural SciencesWound HealingMedicineDermal StructureDrug Discovery
Site-directed mutagenesis was employed to examine the function of two highly conserved residues, Tyr-37 and Arg-41, of human EGF (hEGF) in receptor binding. Both a conservative change to phenylalanine and a semi-conservative change to histidine at position 37 yield proteins with receptor affinity similar to wild-type hEGF. A non-conservative change to alanine results in a molecule with about 40% of the receptor affinity, indicating that an aromatic residue is not essential at this position. Both conservative (to lysine) and non-conservative (to alanine) substitutions at position 41 drastically reduced receptor binding to less than 0.5% of the wild-type activity. 1D-NMR data indicate that the replacement of Arg-41 by lysine does not significantly alter the native protein conformation. Thus, Arg-41 may be directly involved in ligand receptor interaction, whereas the side chain of Tyr-37, although possibly important structurally, is not essential for receptor binding.
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