Ligand bias underlies differential signaling of multiple FGFs via FGFR1

Author:

Karl Kelly1ORCID,Del Piccolo Nuala1ORCID,Light Taylor1,Roy Tanaya1,Dudeja Pooja23,Ursachi Vlad-Constantin23,Fafilek Bohumil243,Krejci Pavel243ORCID,Hristova Kalina1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Institute for NanoBioTechnology, and Program in Molecular Biophysics, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore MD 21218

2. Department of Biology, Faculty of Medicine, Masaryk University, 62500 Brno, Czech Republic

3. International Clinical Research Center, St. Anne’s University Hospital, 65691 Brno, Czech Republic

4. Institute of Animal Physiology and Genetics of the CAS, 60200 Brno, Czech Republic

Abstract

The mechanism of differential signaling of multiple FGF ligands through a single FGF receptor is poorly understood. Here, we use biophysical tools to quantify multiple aspects of FGFR1 signaling in response to FGF4, FGF8 and FGF9: potency, efficacy, bias, ligand-induced oligomerization and downregulation, and conformation of the active FGFR1 dimers. We find that the three ligands exhibit distinctly different potencies and efficacies for inducing responses in cells. We further discover qualitative differences in the actions of the three FGFs through FGFR1, as FGF8 preferentially activates some of the probed downstream responses (FRS2 phosphorylation and extracellular matrix loss), while FGF4 and FGF9 preferentially activate different probed responses (FGFR1 phosphorylation and cell growth arrest). Thus, FGF8 is a biased ligand, when compared to FGF4 and FGF9. Förster resonance energy transfer experiments reveal a correlation between biased signaling and the conformation of the FGFR1 transmembrane domain dimer. Our findings expand the mechanistic understanding of FGF signaling during development and bring the poorly understood concept of receptor tyrosine kinase ligand bias into the spotlight.

Publisher

eLife Sciences Publications, Ltd

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