A sterol-binding pocket in iRhom1 underlies paralog-specific regulation of the sheddase ADAM17

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Abstract

ADAM17, the major sheddase in mammalian cells, releases membrane-tethered EGFR ligands and inflammatory cytokines, and is a central regulator of cell signalling. The rhomboid pseudoproteases, iRhom1 and iRhom2, function as essential cofactors of ADAM17, controlling its maturation and activation. In contrast to the well-characterized iRhom2, the mechanism and regulation of its ubiquitously expressed paralog iRhom1 remain undefined. Here, we present a 2.5 Å cryo-EM structure of the full-length human iRhom1/ADAM17 complex, revealing a previously unrecognized sterol-binding pocket located between TMD2 and TMD5. Structure-guided mutagenesis and pharmacological perturbation of sterol binding demonstrate that sterol binding is required to stabilize the iRhom1/ADAM17 complex and sustain its shedding activity. Strikingly, this regulation is paralog-specific: iRhom2 precludes sterol binding and instead stabilizes ADAM17 through direct intramolecular interactions. Furthermore, two human iRhom1 variants associated with cardiac disease localize adjacent to the sterol-binding pocket and disrupt ADAM17 maturation and activity. Together, these findings uncover mechanistic divergence between iRhom paralogs and establish a sterol-binding pocket in iRhom1 as a critical determinant of ADAM17 stability, revealing a potential avenue for paralog-selective therapeutic targeting.

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