학술논문

Structures of the HER2–HER3–NRG1β complex reveal a dynamic dimer interface
Document Type
article
Source
Nature. 600(7888)
Subject
Biochemistry and Cell Biology
Chemical Sciences
Biological Sciences
Breast Cancer
Cancer
Development of treatments and therapeutic interventions
5.1 Pharmaceuticals
Generic health relevance
Allosteric Regulation
Antibodies
Monoclonal
Humanized
Binding Sites
Cryoelectron Microscopy
Humans
Immunoglobulin Fab Fragments
Models
Molecular
Mutation
Neuregulin-1
Oncogenes
Protein Multimerization
Protein Stability
Receptor
ErbB-2
Receptor
ErbB-3
Trastuzumab
Receptor
erbB-2
Receptor
erbB-3
General Science & Technology
Language
Abstract
Human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) and HER3 form a potent pro-oncogenic heterocomplex1-3 upon binding of growth factor neuregulin-1β (NRG1β). The mechanism by which HER2 and HER3 interact remains unknown in the absence of any structures of the complex. Here we isolated the NRG1β-bound near full-length HER2-HER3 dimer and, using cryo-electron microscopy, reconstructed the extracellulardomain module, revealing unexpected dynamics at the HER2-HER3 dimerization interface. We show that the dimerization arm of NRG1β-bound HER3 is unresolved because the apo HER2 monomer does not undergo a ligand-induced conformational change needed to establish a HER3 dimerization arm-binding pocket. In a structure of the oncogenic extracellular domain mutant HER2(S310F), we observe a compensatory interaction with the HER3 dimerization arm that stabilizes the dimerization interface. Both HER2-HER3 and HER2(S310F)-HER3 retain the capacity to bind to the HER2-directed therapeutic antibody trastuzumab, but the mutant complex does not bind to pertuzumab. Our structure of the HER2(S310F)-HER3-NRG1β-trastuzumab Fab complex reveals that the receptor dimer undergoes a conformational change to accommodate trastuzumab. Thus, similar to oncogenic mutations, therapeutic agents exploit the intrinsic dynamics of the HER2-HER3 heterodimer. The unique features of a singly liganded HER2-HER3 heterodimer underscore the allosteric sensing of ligand occupancy by the dimerization interface and explain why extracellular domains of HER2 do not homo-associate via a canonical active dimer interface.