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Structures of the HER2–HER3–NRG1β complex reveal a dynamic dimer interface

Author

Listed:
  • Devan Diwanji

    (University of California San Francisco
    University of California San Francisco)

  • Raphael Trenker

    (University of California San Francisco)

  • Tarjani M. Thaker

    (University of California San Francisco
    The University of Arizona)

  • Feng Wang

    (University of California San Francisco)

  • David A. Agard

    (University of California San Francisco)

  • Kliment A. Verba

    (University of California San Francisco
    University of California San Francisco)

  • Natalia Jura

    (University of California San Francisco
    University of California San Francisco)

Abstract

Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) and HER3 form a potent pro-oncogenic heterocomplex1–3 upon binding of growth factor neuregulin-1β (NRG1β). The mechanism by which HER2 and HER3 interact remains unknown in the absence of any structures of the complex. Here we isolated the NRG1β-bound near full-length HER2–HER3 dimer and, using cryo-electron microscopy, reconstructed the extracellular domain module, revealing unexpected dynamics at the HER2–HER3 dimerization interface. We show that the dimerization arm of NRG1β-bound HER3 is unresolved because the apo HER2 monomer does not undergo a ligand-induced conformational change needed to establish a HER3 dimerization arm-binding pocket. In a structure of the oncogenic extracellular domain mutant HER2(S310F), we observe a compensatory interaction with the HER3 dimerization arm that stabilizes the dimerization interface. Both HER2–HER3 and HER2(S310F)–HER3 retain the capacity to bind to the HER2-directed therapeutic antibody trastuzumab, but the mutant complex does not bind to pertuzumab. Our structure of the HER2(S310F)–HER3–NRG1β–trastuzumab Fab complex reveals that the receptor dimer undergoes a conformational change to accommodate trastuzumab. Thus, similar to oncogenic mutations, therapeutic agents exploit the intrinsic dynamics of the HER2–HER3 heterodimer. The unique features of a singly liganded HER2–HER3 heterodimer underscore the allosteric sensing of ligand occupancy by the dimerization interface and explain why extracellular domains of HER2 do not homo-associate via a canonical active dimer interface.

Suggested Citation

  • Devan Diwanji & Raphael Trenker & Tarjani M. Thaker & Feng Wang & David A. Agard & Kliment A. Verba & Natalia Jura, 2021. "Structures of the HER2–HER3–NRG1β complex reveal a dynamic dimer interface," Nature, Nature, vol. 600(7888), pages 339-343, December.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:600:y:2021:i:7888:d:10.1038_s41586-021-04084-z
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-04084-z
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    Cited by:

    1. Hao Li & Zebei Han & Yu Sun & Fu Wang & Pengzhen Hu & Yuang Gao & Xuemei Bai & Shiyu Peng & Chao Ren & Xiang Xu & Zeyu Liu & Hebing Chen & Yang Yang & Xiaochen Bo, 2024. "CGMega: explainable graph neural network framework with attention mechanisms for cancer gene module dissection," Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 15(1), pages 1-15, December.

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