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Originally published as Biophys J. BioFAST on May 16, 2008.
doi:10.1529/biophysj.108.133371
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Biophysical Journal 95:2086-2096 (2008)
© 2008 The Biophysical Society

Quantitative Characterization of the Large-Scale Association of ErbB1 and ErbB2 by Flow Cytometric Homo-FRET Measurements

Ágnes Szabó *, Gábor Horváth *, János Szöllosi * {dagger} and Peter Nagy *

* Department of Biophysics and Cell Biology, and {dagger} Cell Biology and Signaling Research Group of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Research Center for Molecular Medicine, University of Debrecen, Debrecen, Hungary

Correspondence: Address reprint requests to Peter Nagy, Dept. of Biophysics and Cell Biology, University of Debrecen, Egyetem Square 1, Debrecen 4010, Hungary. E-mail: nagyp{at}dote.hu.

The association of receptor tyrosine kinases is a key step in the initiation of growth factor-mediated signaling. Although the ligand-induced dimerization of inactive, monomeric receptors was the central dogma of receptor tyrosine kinase activation for decades, the existence of larger oligomers is now accepted. Both homoassociations and heteroassociations are of extreme importance in the epidermal growth factor (EGF) receptor family, leading to diverse and robust signaling. We present a statistically reliable, flow-cytometric homo-fluorescence resonance energy transfer method for the quantitative characterization of large-scale receptor clusters. We assumed that a fraction of a certain protein species is monomeric, whereas the rest are present in homoclusters of N-mers. We measured fluorescence anisotropy as a function of the saturation of fluorescent antibody binding, and fitted the model to the anisotropy data yielding the fraction of monomers and the cluster size. We found that ErbB2 formed larger homoclusters than ErbB1. Stimulation with EGF and heregulin led to a decrease in ErbB2 homocluster size, whereas ErbB1 homoclusters became larger after EGF stimulation. The activation level of ErbB2 was inversely proportional to its homocluster size. We conclude that homoclusters of ErbB1 and ErbB2 behave in a fundamentally different way. Whereas huge ErbB2 clusters serve as a reservoir of inactive coreceptors and dissociate upon stimulation, small ErbB1 homoclusters form higher-order oligomers after ligand binding.







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