Cell
Volume 180, Issue 2, 23 January 2020, Pages 323-339.e19
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Article
Structural Basis of Teneurin-Latrophilin Interaction in Repulsive Guidance of Migrating Neurons

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2019.12.014Get rights and content
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Highlights

  • Crystal structures reveal binding site for Latrophilin on the Teneurin YD shell

  • A ternary Latrophilin-Teneurin-FLRT complex forms in vitro and in vivo

  • Latrophilin controls cortical migration by binding to Teneurins and FLRTs

  • Latrophilin elicits repulsion of cortical cell bodies/small neurites but not axons

Summary

Teneurins are ancient metazoan cell adhesion receptors that control brain development and neuronal wiring in higher animals. The extracellular C terminus binds the adhesion GPCR Latrophilin, forming a trans-cellular complex with synaptogenic functions. However, Teneurins, Latrophilins, and FLRT proteins are also expressed during murine cortical cell migration at earlier developmental stages. Here, we present crystal structures of Teneurin-Latrophilin complexes that reveal how the lectin and olfactomedin domains of Latrophilin bind across a spiraling beta-barrel domain of Teneurin, the YD shell. We couple structure-based protein engineering to biophysical analysis, cell migration assays, and in utero electroporation experiments to probe the importance of the interaction in cortical neuron migration. We show that binding of Latrophilins to Teneurins and FLRTs directs the migration of neurons using a contact repulsion-dependent mechanism. The effect is observed with cell bodies and small neurites rather than their processes. The results exemplify how a structure-encoded synaptogenic protein complex is also used for repulsive cell guidance.

Keywords

Teneurin
Latrophilin
FLRT
adhesion
repulsion
neuronal migration
cortex development
radial glia
pyramidal neuron

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