C-terminal phosphorylation of latrophilin-1/ADGRL1 affects the interaction between its fragments.

ANNALS OF THE NEW YORK ACADEMY OF SCIENCES(2019)

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Abstract
Latrophilin-1 is an adhesion G protein-coupled receptor that mediates the effect of alpha-latrotoxin, causing massive release of neurotransmitters from nerve terminals and endocrine cells. Autoproteolysis cleaves latrophilin-1 into two parts: the extracellular N-terminal fragment (NTF) and the heptahelical C-terminal fragment (CTF). NTF and CTF can exist as independent proteins in the plasma membrane, but alpha-latrotoxin binding to NTF induces their association and G protein-mediated signaling. We demonstrate here that CTF in synapses is phosphorylated on multiple sites. Phosphorylated CTF has a high affinity for NTF and copurifies with it on affinity columns and sucrose density gradients. Dephosphorylated CTF has a lower affinity for NTF and can behave as a separate protein. alpha-Latrotoxin (and possibly other ligands of latrophilin-1) binds both to the NTF-CTF complex and receptor-like protein tyrosine phosphatase sigma, bringing them together. This leads to CTF dephosphorylation and facilitates CTF release from the complex. We propose that ligand-dependent phosphorylation-dephosphorylation of latrophilin-1 could affect the interaction between its fragments and functions as a G protein-coupled receptor.
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Key words
latrophilin,adhesion GPCRs,fragment,phosphorylation,alpha-latrotoxin
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