Van der Heyden M A, Nievers M, Verkleij A J, Boonstra J, Van Bergen en Henegouwen P M
Department of Molecular Cell Biology, Institute of Biomembranes, Universiteit Utrecht, The Netherlands.
FEBS Lett. 1997 Jun 30;410(2-3):265-8. doi: 10.1016/s0014-5793(97)00599-1.
Although all EGF receptors in EGF receptor-expressing cells are molecularly identical, they can be subdivided in two different classes that have either a high or a low affinity for EGF. Specifically the high-affinity class is associated with filamentous actin. To determine whether the interaction of the EGF receptor with actin induces its high-affinity state, we studied EGF-binding properties of an EGF receptor mutant that lacks the actin-binding site. Interestingly, we found that cells expressing this mutant receptor still display both high- and low-affinity classes of EGF receptors, indicating that the actin-binding domain does not determine the high-affinity binding state. By further mutational analysis we identified a receptor domain, within the tyrosine kinase domain, that regulates the affinity for EGF.