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Structural basis for FGF hormone signalling

Author

Listed:
  • Lingfeng Chen

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    Hangzhou Medical College)

  • Lili Fu

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    Oujiang Laboratory (Zhejiang Lab for Regenerative Medicine, Vision, and Brain Health)
    Wenzhou Medical University)

  • Jingchuan Sun

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    Westlake University)

  • Zhiqiang Huang

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    Oujiang Laboratory (Zhejiang Lab for Regenerative Medicine, Vision, and Brain Health))

  • Mingzhen Fang

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    Oujiang Laboratory (Zhejiang Lab for Regenerative Medicine, Vision, and Brain Health))

  • Allen Zinkle

    (Columbia University Irving Medical Center)

  • Xin Liu

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    Oujiang Laboratory (Zhejiang Lab for Regenerative Medicine, Vision, and Brain Health))

  • Junliang Lu

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    Oujiang Laboratory (Zhejiang Lab for Regenerative Medicine, Vision, and Brain Health))

  • Zixiang Pan

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    Oujiang Laboratory (Zhejiang Lab for Regenerative Medicine, Vision, and Brain Health))

  • Yang Wang

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    University of Chinese Academy of Sciences)

  • Guang Liang

    (Hangzhou Medical College)

  • Xiaokun Li

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    Wenzhou Medical University
    Wenzhou Medical University)

  • Gaozhi Chen

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    Oujiang Laboratory (Zhejiang Lab for Regenerative Medicine, Vision, and Brain Health)
    Wenzhou Medical University)

  • Moosa Mohammadi

    (Wenzhou Medical University
    Oujiang Laboratory (Zhejiang Lab for Regenerative Medicine, Vision, and Brain Health))

Abstract

α/βKlotho coreceptors simultaneously engage fibroblast growth factor (FGF) hormones (FGF19, FGF21 and FGF23)1,2 and their cognate cell-surface FGF receptors (FGFR1–4) thereby stabilizing the endocrine FGF–FGFR complex3–6. However, these hormones still require heparan sulfate (HS) proteoglycan as an additional coreceptor to induce FGFR dimerization/activation and hence elicit their essential metabolic activities6. To reveal the molecular mechanism underpinning the coreceptor role of HS, we solved cryo-electron microscopy structures of three distinct 1:2:1:1 FGF23–FGFR–αKlotho–HS quaternary complexes featuring the ‘c’ splice isoforms of FGFR1 (FGFR1c), FGFR3 (FGFR3c) or FGFR4 as the receptor component. These structures, supported by cell-based receptor complementation and heterodimerization experiments, reveal that a single HS chain enables FGF23 and its primary FGFR within a 1:1:1 FGF23–FGFR–αKlotho ternary complex to jointly recruit a lone secondary FGFR molecule leading to asymmetric receptor dimerization and activation. However, αKlotho does not directly participate in recruiting the secondary receptor/dimerization. We also show that the asymmetric mode of receptor dimerization is applicable to paracrine FGFs that signal solely in an HS-dependent fashion. Our structural and biochemical data overturn the current symmetric FGFR dimerization paradigm and provide blueprints for rational discovery of modulators of FGF signalling2 as therapeutics for human metabolic diseases and cancer.

Suggested Citation

  • Lingfeng Chen & Lili Fu & Jingchuan Sun & Zhiqiang Huang & Mingzhen Fang & Allen Zinkle & Xin Liu & Junliang Lu & Zixiang Pan & Yang Wang & Guang Liang & Xiaokun Li & Gaozhi Chen & Moosa Mohammadi, 2023. "Structural basis for FGF hormone signalling," Nature, Nature, vol. 618(7966), pages 862-870, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nature:v:618:y:2023:i:7966:d:10.1038_s41586-023-06155-9
    DOI: 10.1038/s41586-023-06155-9
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