ErbB3 has been shown to bind the ligands
heregulin and
NRG-2. Ligand binding causes a change in conformation that allows for dimerization, phosphorylation, and activation of signal transduction. ErbB3 can heterodimerize with any of the other three ErbB family members. The theoretical ErbB3 homodimer would be non-functional because the kinase-impaired protein requires transphosphorylation by its binding partner to be active. Therefore, ErbB3 must act as an
allosteric activator.
Interaction with ErbB2 The ErbB2-ErbB3 dimer is considered the most active of the possible ErbB dimers, in part because ErbB2 is the preferred dimerization partner of all the ErbB family members, and ErbB3 is the preferred partner of ErbB2. This heterodimer conformation allows the signaling complex to activate multiple pathways including the MAPK, PI3K/Akt, and PLCγ. There is also evidence that the ErbB2-ErbB3 heterodimer can bind and be activated by EGF-like ligands. === Activation of the
PI3K/Akt pathway === The intracellular domain of ErbB3 contains 6 recognition sites for the SH2 domain of the p85 subunit of
PI3K. ErbB3 binding causes the allosteric activation of
p110α, the lipid kinase subunit of PI3K, a function not found in either
EGFR or ErbB2. == Role in cancer ==