The AXL Receptor Is a Sensor of Ligand Spatial Heterogeneity
Author(s)
Meyer, Aaron Samuel; Zweemer, Jacomina M.; Lauffenburger, Douglas A
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The AXL receptor is a TAM (Tyro3, AXL, MerTK) receptor tyrosine kinase (RTK) important in physiological inflammatory processes such as blood clotting, viral infection, and innate immune-mediated cell clearance. Overexpression of the receptor in a number of solid tumors is increasingly appreciated as a key drug resistance and tumor dissemination mechanism. Although the ligand-receptor (Gas6-AXL) complex structure is known, literature reports on ligand-mediated signaling have provided conflicting conclusions regarding the influence of other factors such as phosphatidylserine binding, and a detailed, mechanistic picture of AXL activation has not emerged. Integrating quantitative experiments with mathematical modeling, we show here that AXL operates to sense local spatial heterogeneity in ligand concentration, a feature consistent with its physiological role in inflammatory cell responses. This effect arises as a result of an intricate reaction-diffusion interaction. Our results demonstrate that AXL functions distinctly from other RTK families, a vital insight for the envisioned design of AXL-targeted therapeutic intervention.
Date issued
2015-07Department
Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Biological Engineering; Koch Institute for Integrative Cancer Research at MITJournal
Cell Systems
Publisher
Elsevier
Citation
Meyer, Aaron S., Annelien J.M. Zweemer, and Douglas A. Lauffenburger. “The AXL Receptor Is a Sensor of Ligand Spatial Heterogeneity.” Cell Systems 1.1 (2015): 25–36.
Version: Author's final manuscript
ISSN
2405-4712