Molecular basis for Ras suppressor-1 recruitment to focal adhesions and stabilization of consensus adhesome complex

2021 
Ras suppressor-1 (Rsu-1) is a leucine-rich repeat (LRR)-containing protein that is crucial for regulating fundamental cell adhesion processes and tumor development. Rsu-1 interacts with a zinc-finger type multi LIM domain-containing adaptor protein PINCH-1 involved in the integrin-mediated consensus adhesome but not with highly homologous isoform PINCH-2. However, the structural basis for such specific interaction and regulatory mechanism remains unclear. Here, we determined the crystal structures of Rsu-1 and its complex with the PINCH-1 LIM4-5 domains. Rsu-1 displays an arc-shaped solenoid architecture with eight LRRs shielded by the N- and C-terminal capping modules. We show that a large conserved concave surface of the Rsu-1 LRR domain recognizes the PINCH-1 LIM5 domain, and that the C-terminal non-LIM region of PINCH-2 but not PINCH-1 sterically disfavors the Rsu-1 binding. We further show that Rsu-1 can be assembled, via PINCH-1-binding, into a tight hetero-pentamer complex comprising Rsu-1, PINCH-1, ILK, Parvin, and Kindlin-2 that constitute a major consensus integrin adhesome crucial for focal adhesion assembly. Consistently, our mutagenesis and cell biological data consolidate the significance of the Rsu-1/PINCH-1 interaction in focal adhesion assembly and cell spreading. Our results provide a crucial molecular insight into Rsu-1-mediated cell adhesion with implication on how it may regulate tumorigenic growth.
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