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Structure‐based discovery and redesign of <scp>TGF</scp> ‐β1 Elbow epitope recognition by its <scp>type‐II</scp> receptor in hypertrophic scarring biotherapy

Authors :
Xiaoting Chen
Songlin Yang
Guang-Yu Mao
Xiangdong Liu
Jiang-Hong Zheng
Huixiong Wang
Source :
Journal of Molecular Recognition. 34
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Wiley, 2020.

Abstract

Transforming growth factor-β1 (TGF-β1) signaling pathway has been implicated in the fibroblast activation of hypertrophic scarring (HS). Previously, we proposed a new biotherapeutic strategy to combat HS by disrupting the intermolecular interaction of TGF-β1 with its cognate type-II receptor (TβR-II). Here, we further demonstrate that the binding site of TGF-β1 to TβR-II is not overlapped with the conformational wrist epitope and linear knuckle epitope that are traditionally recognized as the functional binding sites of bone morphogenetic protein-2 (BMP-2) to its type-II receptor (BMPR-II), which can thus be regarded as a new functional site we called elbow epitope. Structural, energetic, and dynamic investigations reveal that the elbow epitope consists of two sequentially discontinuous, spatially vicinal segments Loop30-34 and Turn90-95 ; they cannot work effectively to independently interact with TβR-II. Rational redesign of the epitope is performed using an integrated in silio-in vitro method based on crystal and modeled structure data. In the procedure, the two epitope segments are split from the interface of TGF-β1-TβR-II complex and then connected with each other in a head-to-tail manner by adding a flexible poly-(Gly)n linker between them, thus resulting in a series of combined peptides. We found that the peptide affinity reaches maximum at n = 2, which shares a consistent binding mode with the elbow epitope at native complex interface. The linker of either too long (n &gt; 2) or too short (n &lt; 2) cannot properly place the gap space between the two segments, thus impairing the binding compatibility of designed peptides with TβR-II active site.

Details

ISSN :
10991352 and 09523499
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Molecular Recognition
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....31ad63b2c603c2ef662c11478471771b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/jmr.2881