Focal adhesion targeting region

In structural and cell biology, the focal adhesion targeting domain is a conserved protein domain that was first identified in focal adhesion kinase (FAK), also known as PTK2 protein tyrosine kinase 2 (PTK2).[1]

Focal adhesion targeting domain
Crystal structure of the FAT domain of Focal Adhesion Kinase
Identifiers
SymbolFocal_AT
PfamPF03623
InterProIPR005189
SCOPe1ktm / SUPFAM

Focal adhesions are multi-protein intracellular signalling complexes that link the cellular actin microfilament cytoskeleton, through the cell membrane via transmembrane integrin proteins, to the extracellular matrix. Focal adhesions form and dissipate as cells attach and detach from matrix during cell adhesion and cell migration.[2]

The FAK focal adhesion targeting (FAT) domain is a C-terminal region necessary and sufficient for localizing FAK to focal adhesions, allowing FAK to regulate cell adhesion and migration by localizing its protein kinase activity at the junction of internal cytoskeleton and external cell attachment points. The crystal structure of FAT shows it to form a four-helix bundle that binds specifically to Leucine-Aspartate (LD)-repeat motif peptides in the related focal adhesion proteins paxillin (PXN), leupaxin (LPXN) and TGFB1I1/Hic-5.[1]

FAT domains with a similar 4-helix bundle structure are also found in other proteins that localize to paxillin-containing focal adhesions and are involved in cell adhesion and migration, including the FAK-related protein kinase PTK2B/FAK2/PYK2, and alpha-catenin, vinculin, Programmed cell death protein 10 (PDCD10)/Cerebral Cavernous Malformation protein 3 (CCM3) and GIT1/GIT2.[3]

References

  1. Hayashi I, Vuori K, Liddington RC (February 2002). "The focal adhesion targeting (FAT) region of focal adhesion kinase is a four-helix bundle that binds paxillin". Nat. Struct. Biol. 9 (2): 101–6. doi:10.1038/nsb755. PMID 11799401.
  2. Burridge K, Fath K, Kelly T, Nuckolls G, Turner C (1988). "Focal adhesions: transmembrane junctions between the extracellular matrix and the cytoskeleton". Annual Review of Cell Biology. 4: 487–525. doi:10.1146/annurev.cb.04.110188.002415. PMID 3058164.
  3. Alam T, Alazmi M, Gao X, Arold ST (June 2014). "How to find a leucine in a haystack? Structure, ligand recognition and regulation of leucine-aspartic acid (LD) motifs". Biochemical Journal. 460 (3): 317–329. doi:10.1042/BJ20140298. PMID 24870021.

Eukaryotic Linear Motif resource motif class LIG_FAT_LD_1

This article incorporates text from the public domain Pfam and InterPro: IPR005189
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