Laminins contain several
conserved protein domains.
Laminin I and Laminin II Laminins are trimeric molecules; laminin-1 is an alpha1 beta1 gamma1
trimer. It has been suggested that the
domains I and II from laminin A, B1 and B2 may come together to form a triple helical
coiled-coil structure.
Laminin B The laminin B domain (also known as domain IV) is an
extracellular module of unknown function. It is found in a number of different
proteins that include,
heparan sulphate proteoglycan from
basement membrane, a laminin-like protein from
Caenorhabditis elegans and laminin. Laminin IV domain is not found in short laminin chains (alpha4 or beta3).
Laminin EGF-like Beside different types of globular
domains each laminin subunit contains, in its first half, consecutive
repeats of about 60
amino acids in length that include eight conserved
cysteines. The tertiary structure of this domain is remotely similar in its
N-terminus to that of the
EGF-like module. It is also known as a 'LE' or 'laminin-type EGF-like' domain. The number of copies of the laminin EGF-like domain in the different forms of laminins is highly variable; from 3 up to 22 copies have been found. In
mouse laminin gamma-1 chain, the seventh LE domain has been shown to be the only one that
binds with a high affinity to
nidogen. The binding-sites are located on the surface within the
loops C1-C3 and C5-C6.
Laminin G The laminin globular (G) domain, also known as the LNS (Laminin-alpha, Neurexin and Sex hormone-binding globulin) domain, is on average 177
amino acids in length and can be found in one to six copies in various laminin family members as well as in a large number of other
extracellular proteins. For example, all laminin alpha-chains have five laminin G domains, all
collagen family proteins have one laminin G domain, the CNTNAP proteins have four laminin G domains, while neurexin 1 and 2 each hold six laminin G domains. On average, approximately one quarter of the proteins that hold laminin G domains is taken up by these laminin G domains themselves. The smallest laminin G domain can be found in one of the collagen proteins (COL24A1; 77 AA) and the largest domain in TSPEAR (219 AA). The exact function of the Laminin G
domains has remained elusive, and a variety of binding functions has been ascribed to different Laminin G modules. For example, the laminin alpha1 and alpha2 chains each have five
C-terminal laminin G domains, where only domains LG4 and LG5 contain
binding sites for heparin,
sulphatides and the
cell surface receptor dystroglycan. Laminin G-containing
proteins appear to have a wide variety of roles in
cell adhesion,
signalling,
migration, assembly and
differentiation.
Laminin N-terminal Basement membrane assembly is a cooperative process in which laminins
polymerise through their N-terminal domain (LN or domain VI) and anchor to the
cell surface through their G domains.
Netrins may also associate with this network through heterotypic LN domain interactions. The laminin N-terminal domain is found in all laminin and netrin
subunits except laminin alpha 3A, alpha 4 and gamma 2. ==Human proteins containing laminin domains==