Summary
Epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) regulates many crucial cellular
programs, with seven different activating ligands shaping cell signaling in
distinct ways. Using crystallography and other approaches, we show how the EGFR
ligands epiregulin (EREG) and epigen (EPGN) stabilize different dimeric
conformations of the EGFR extracellular region. As a consequence, EREG or EPGN
induce less stable EGFR dimers than EGF – making them partial agonists
of EGFR dimerization. Unexpectedly, this weakened dimerization elicits more
sustained EGFR signaling than seen with EGF, provoking responses in breast
cancer cells associated with differentiation rather than proliferation. Our
results reveal how responses to different EGFR ligands are defined by receptor
dimerization strength and signaling dynamics. These findings have broad
implications for understanding receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) signaling
specificity. Our results also suggest parallels between partial and/or biased
agonism in RTKs and G protein-coupled receptors, as well as new therapeutic
opportunities for correcting RTK signaling output.
Systems immunology lacks a framework with which to derive theoretical understanding from high-dimensional datasets. We combined a robotic platform with machine learning to experimentally measure and theoretically model CD8
+
T cell activation. High-dimensional cytokine dynamics could be compressed onto a low-dimensional latent space in an antigen-specific manner (so-called “antigen encoding”). We used antigen encoding to model and reconstruct patterns of T cell immune activation. The model delineated six classes of antigens eliciting distinct T cell responses. We generalized antigen encoding to multiple immune settings, including drug perturbations and activation of chimeric antigen receptor T cells. Such universal antigen encoding for T cell activation may enable further modeling of immune responses and their rational manipulation to optimize immunotherapies.
Using a modified single-molecule pull-down (SiMPull) approach, the first direct detection of activation-dependent multisite phosphorylation on intact EGFR is provided. Integrating SiMPull data with rule-based modeling revealed roles for receptor dimerization dynamics and adaptor protein concentrations in directing EGFR signaling.
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