Structural Basis for CD96 Immune Receptor Recognition of Nectin-like Protein-5, CD155
- PMID: 30528596
- DOI: 10.1016/j.str.2018.10.023
Structural Basis for CD96 Immune Receptor Recognition of Nectin-like Protein-5, CD155
Abstract
CD96, DNAM-1, and TIGIT constitute a group of immunoglobulin superfamily receptors that are key regulators of tumor immune surveillance. Within this axis, CD96 recognizes the adhesion molecule nectin-like protein-5 (necl-5), although the molecular basis underpinning this interaction remains unclear. We show that the first immunoglobulin domain (D1) of CD96 is sufficient to mediate a robust interaction with necl-5, but not the DNAM-1 and TIGIT ligand, nectin-2. The crystal structure of CD96-D1 bound to the necl-5 ectodomain revealed that CD96 recognized necl-5 D1 via a conserved "lock-and-key" interaction observed across TIGIT:necl complexes. Specific necl-5 recognition was underpinned by a novel structural motif within CD96, namely an "ancillary key". Mutational analysis showed that this specific residue was critical for necl-5 binding, while simultaneously providing insights into the unique ligand specificity of CD96.
Keywords: cancer; immune checkpoint; immune escape; immune receptor; nectin adhesion proteins; receptor-ligand interaction; tumour recognition.
Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Comment in
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How Natural Killer Cell Receptors Stick to Cell-Cell Adhesion Proteins.Structure. 2019 Feb 5;27(2):209-210. doi: 10.1016/j.str.2019.01.007. Structure. 2019. PMID: 30726753
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