1. Academic Validation
  2. Sonic hedgehog protein signals not as a hydrolytic enzyme but as an apparent ligand for patched

Sonic hedgehog protein signals not as a hydrolytic enzyme but as an apparent ligand for patched

  • Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 1999 Sep 28;96(20):10992-9. doi: 10.1073/pnas.96.20.10992.
N Fuse 1 T Maiti B Wang J A Porter T M Hall D J Leahy P A Beachy
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Molecular Biology, Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Abstract

The amino-terminal signaling domain of the Sonic Hedgehog secreted protein (Shh-N), which derives from the Shh precursor through an autoprocessing reaction mediated by the carboxyl-terminal domain, executes multiple functions in embryonic tissue patterning, including induction of ventral and suppression of dorsal cell types in the developing neural tube. An apparent catalytic site within Shh-N is suggested by structural homology to a bacterial Carboxypeptidase. We demonstrate here that alteration of residues presumed to be critical for a hydrolytic activity does not cause a loss of inductive activity, thus ruling out catalysis by Shh-N as a requirement for signaling. We favor the alternative, that Shh-N functions primarily as a ligand for the putative receptor Patched (Ptc). This possibility is supported by new evidence for direct binding of Shh-N to Ptc and by a strong correlation between the affinity of Ptc-binding and the signaling potency of Shh-N protein variants carrying alterations of conserved residues in a particular region of the protein surface. These results together suggest that direct Shh-N binding to Ptc is a critical event in transduction of the Shh-N signal.

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