Focal adhesions (FAs) mediate the interaction of the cytoskeleton with the extracellular matrix (ECM) in a highly dynamic fashion. talin is a central regulator, adaptor protein and mechano-sensor of focal adhesion complexes. For recruitment and firm attachment at FAs, talin’s N-terminal FERM domain binds to phosphatidylinositol 4,5-bisphosphate (PIP
2)-enriched membranes. A newly published autoinhibitory structure of talin-1, where the known PIP
2 interaction sites are covered up, lead us to hypothesize that a hitherto less examined loop insertion of the FERM domain acts as an additional and initial site of contact. We evaluated direct interactions of talin-1 with a PIP
2 membrane by means of atomistic molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. We show that this unstructured, 33-residue-long loop strongly interacts with PIP
2 and can facilitate further membrane contacts, including the canonical PIP
2 interactions, by serving as a flexible membrane anchor. Under force as present at FAs, the extensible FERM loop ensures talin to maintain membrane contacts when pulled away from the membrane by up to 7 nm. We identify key basic residues of the anchor mediating the highly dynamic talin-membrane interaction. Our results put forward an intrinsically disordered loop as a key and highly adaptable PIP
2 recognition site of talin and potentially other PIP
2-binding mechano-proteins.
This dataset contains setup scripts, molecular dynamics parameters, input files and derived data from the molecular dynamics simulations of this paper available at https://hits-mbm-dev.github.io/paper-talin-loop/.