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Structural basis of ligand interaction with atypical chemokine receptor 3

Authors :
Liwen Wang
Noortje van Gils
Martin Gustavsson
Tracy M. Handel
Penglie Zhang
Sichun Yang
Irina Kufareva
Bryan S. Stephens
Ruben Abagyan
Thomas J. Schall
Mark R. Chance
Hematology laboratory
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 8, Iss 1, Pp 1-14 (2017), Gustavsson, M, Wang, L, van Gils, N, Stephens, B S, Zhang, P, Schall, T J, Yang, S, Abagyan, R, Chance, M R, Kufareva, I & Handel, T M 2017, ' Structural basis of ligand interaction with atypical chemokine receptor 3 ', Nature Communications, vol. 8, pp. 14135 . https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms14135, Nature Communications, Nature Communications, 8. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2017
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2017.

Abstract

Chemokines drive cell migration through their interactions with seven-transmembrane (7TM) chemokine receptors on cell surfaces. The atypical chemokine receptor 3 (ACKR3) binds chemokines CXCL11 and CXCL12 and signals exclusively through β-arrestin-mediated pathways, without activating canonical G-protein signalling. This receptor is upregulated in numerous cancers making it a potential drug target. Here we collected over 100 distinct structural probes from radiolytic footprinting, disulfide trapping, and mutagenesis to map the structures of ACKR3:CXCL12 and ACKR3:small-molecule complexes, including dynamic regions that proved unresolvable by X-ray crystallography in homologous receptors. The data are integrated with molecular modelling to produce complete and cohesive experimentally driven models that confirm and expand on the existing knowledge of the architecture of receptor:chemokine and receptor:small-molecule complexes. Additionally, we detected and characterized ligand-induced conformational changes in the transmembrane and intracellular regions of ACKR3 that elucidate fundamental structural elements of agonism in this atypical receptor.<br />The atypical chemokine receptor 3 (ACKR3) is important for cell migration in development and cancer. Here the authors combine radiolytic footprinting, disulfide trapping, mutagenesis and molecular modelling to characterize the ligand interactions and ligand-induced conformational changes in ACKR3.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fd0ef02f6a5274ee8699b96f2608a153