Publication | Closed Access
Analysis of CD36 Binding Domains: Ligand Specificity Controlled by Dephosphorylation of an Ectodomain
219
Citations
31
References
1993
Year
ImmunologyMolecular BiologyPlatelet ReactivityImmune SystemCd36 BindingReceptor Tyrosine KinaseCell SignalingProtein FunctionProtein Cd36Biochemical InteractionBiomolecular InteractionLigand Specificity ControlledCell BiologyProtein PhosphorylationThrombopoiesisMolecular DockingSignal TransductionBlood PlateletNatural SciencesCollagen AdhesionCellular BiochemistryMedicine
The protein CD36 is a membrane receptor for thrombospondin (TSP), malaria-infected erythrocytes, and collagen. Three functional sequences were identified within a single disulfide loop of CD36: one that mediates TSP binding (amino acids 87 to 99) and two that support malarial cytoadhesion (amino acids 8 to 21 and 97 to 110). One of these peptides (p87-99) is a consensus protein kinase C (PKC) phosphorylation site. Dephosphorylation of constitutively phosphorylated CD36 in resting platelets and a megakaryocytic cell line led to the loss of collagen adhesion and platelet reactivity to collagen, with a reciprocal increase in TSP binding. PKC-mediated phosphorylation of this ectodomain resulted in a loss of TSP binding and the reciprocal acquisition of collagen binding. In site-directed mutagenesis studies, when the threonine phosphorylation site was changed to alanine, CD36 was expressed in a dephosphorylated state and bound to TSP constitutively.
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