首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Chemokines mediate their biological activity through activation of G protein coupled receptors, but most chemokines, including RANTES, are also able to bind glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). Here, we have investigated, by site-directed mutagenesis and chemical acetylation, the role of RANTES basic residues in the interaction with GAGs using surface plasmon resonance kinetic analysis. Our results indicate that (i) RANTES exhibited selectivity in GAGs binding with highest affinity (K(d) = 32.1 nM) for heparin, (ii) RANTES uses the side chains of residues R44, K45, and R47 for heparin binding, and blocking these residues in combination abolished heparin binding. The biological relevance of RANTES-GAGs interaction was investigated in CHO-K1 cells expressing CCR5, CCR1, or CCR3 and the various GAGs that bind RANTES. Our results indicate that the heparin binding site, defined as the 40s loop, is only marginally involved in CCR5 binding and activation, but largely overlaps the CCR1 and CCR3 binding and activation domain in RANTES. In addition, enzymatic removal of cell surface GAGs by glycosidases did not affect CCR5 binding and Ca(2+) response. Furthermore, addition of soluble GAGs inhibited both CCR5 binding and functional response, with a rank of potency similar to that found in surface plasmon resonance experiments. Thus, cell surface GAGs is not a prerequisite for receptor binding or signaling, but soluble GAGs can inhibit the binding and the functional response of RANTES to CCR5 expressing cells. However, the marked selectivity of RANTES for different GAGs may serve, in vivo, to control the concentration of specific chemokines in inflammatory situations and locations.  相似文献   

2.
We show that cell surface glycans, sialic acid and mannose-containing species, are involved beside glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), heparan sulfate and chondroitin sulfate in the binding of full length (1--68) RANTES not only to CCR5 positive human primary lymphocytes or macrophages but also to CCR5 negative monocytic U937 cells. Pretreating the cells with neuraminidase, heparitinase, chondroitinase or adding soluble glycans such as mannan or GAGs (heparin or chondroitin sulfate), significantly inhibited RANTES binding. Such effects were not observed with truncated (10--68) RANTES. Heat-denaturation of (1--68) RANTES strongly decreased its binding to the cells, demonstrating involvement of the three-dimensional structure. Accordingly, full length, but not truncated (10--68) RANTES, specifically bound to soluble mannan as well as to mannose-divinylsulfone-agarose affinity matrix and to soluble heparin or chondroitin sulfate as well as to heparin-agarose. Soluble heparin exerts, depending on its concentration, inhibitory or enhancing effects on RANTES binding to mannose-divinylsulfone-agarose, which indicates that RANTES interaction with glycans is modulated by GAGs. These data demonstrate that full length RANTES, but not its (10--68) truncated counterpart, interacts with glycans and GAGs, in soluble forms or presented either by affinity matrices or CCR5 positive as well as CCR5 negative cells.  相似文献   

3.
The chemokines are a family of small chemoattractant proteins that have a range of functions, including activation and promotion of vectorial migration of leukocytes. Regulation on activation, normal T cell expressed and secreted (RANTES; CCL5), a member of the CC-chemokine subfamily, has been implicated in a variety of immune responses. In addition to the interaction of CC-chemokines with their cognate cell-surface receptors, it is known that they also bind to glycosaminoglycans (GAGs), including heparan sulfate. This potential for binding to GAG components of proteoglycans on the cell surface or within the extracellular matrix might allow formation of the stable chemokine concentration gradients necessary for leukocyte chemotaxis. In this study, we created a panel of mutant RANTES molecules containing neutral amino acid substitutions within putative, basic GAG-binding domains. Despite showing reduced binding to GAGs, it was found that each mutant containing a single amino acid substitution induced a similar leukocyte chemotactic response within a concentration gradient generated by free solute diffusion. However, we found that the mutant K45A had a significantly reduced potential to stimulate chemotaxis across a monolayer of microvascular endothelial cells. Significantly, this mutant bound to the CCR5 receptor and showed a potential to mobilize Ca(2+) with an affinity similar to the wild-type protein. These results show that the interaction between RANTES and GAGs is not necessary for specific receptor engagement, signal transduction, or leukocyte migration. However, this interaction is required for the induction of efficient chemotaxis through the extracellular matrix between confluent endothelial cells.  相似文献   

4.
CCL5 (RANTES (regulated on activation normal T cell expressed and secreted)) and its cognate receptor, CCR5, have been implicated in T cell activation. CCL5 binding to glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) on the cell surface or in extracellular matrix sequesters CCL5, thereby immobilizing CCL5 to provide the directional signal. In two CCR5-expressing human T cell lines, PM1.CCR5 and MOLT4.CCR5, and in human peripheral blood-derived T cells, micromolar concentrations of CCL5 induce apoptosis. CCL5-induced cell death involves the cytosolic release of cytochrome c, the activation of caspase-9 and caspase-3, and poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase cleavage. CCL5-induced apoptosis is CCR5-dependent, since native PM1 and MOLT4 cells lacking CCR5 expression are resistant to CCL5-induced cell death. Furthermore, we implicate tyrosine 339 as a critical residue involved in CCL5-induced apoptosis, since PM1 cells expressing a tyrosine mutant receptor, CCR5Y339F, do not undergo apoptosis. We show that CCL5-CCR5-mediated apoptosis is dependent on cell surface GAG binding. The addition of exogenous heparin and chondroitin sulfate and GAG digestion from the cell surface protect cells from apoptosis. Moreover, the non-GAG binding variant, (44AANA47)-CCL5, fails to induce apoptosis. To address the role of aggregation in CCL5-mediated apoptosis, nonaggregating CCL5 mutant E66S, which forms dimers, and E26A, which form tetramers at micromolar concentrations, were utilized. Unlike native CCL5, the E66S mutant fails to induce apoptosis, suggesting that tetramers are the minimal higher ordered CCL5 aggregates required for CCL5-induced apoptosis. Viewed altogether, these data suggest that CCL5-GAG binding and CCL5 aggregation are important for CCL5 activity in T cells, specifically in the context of CCR5-mediated apoptosis.  相似文献   

5.
Chemokines selectively recruit and activate a variety of cells during inflammation. Interactions between cell surface glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) and chemokines drive the formation of haptotactic or immobilized gradients of chemokines at the site of inflammation, directing this recruitment. Chemokines bind to glycosaminoglycans on human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) with affinities in the micromolar range: RANTES > MCP-1 > IL-8 > MIP-1alpha. This binding can be competed with by soluble glycosaminoglycans: heparin, heparin sulfate, chondroitin sulfate, and dermatan sulfate. RANTES binding showed the widest discrimination between glycosaminoglycans (700-fold), whereas MIP-1alpha was the least selective. Almost identical results were obtained in an assay using heparin sulfate beads as the source of immobilized glycosaminoglycan. The binding of chemokines to glycosaminoglycan fragments has a strong length dependence, and optimally requires both N- and O-sulfation. Isothermal titration calorimetry data confirm these results; IL-8 binds heparin fragments with a K(d) of 0.39-2.63 microM, and requires five saccharide units to bind each monomer of chemokine. In membranes from cells expressing the G-protein-coupled chemokine receptors CXCR1, CXCR2, and CCR1, soluble GAGs inhibit the binding of chemokine ligands to their receptors. Consistent with this, heparin and heparin sulfate could inhibit IL-8-induced neutrophil calcium flux. Chemokines can therefore form complexes with both cell surface and soluble GAGs; these interactions have different functions. Soluble GAG chemokines complexes are unable to bind the receptor, resulting in a block of the biological activity. Previously, we have shown that cell surface GAGs present chemokines to the G-protein-coupled receptors, by increasing the local concentration of protein. A model is presented which brings together all of these data. The selectivity in the chemokine-GAG interaction suggests selective disruption of the haptotactic gradient may be an achievable therapeutic approach in inflammatory disease.  相似文献   

6.
Interaction of RANTES with its membrane ligands or receptors transduces multiple intracellular signals. Whether RANTES uses proteoglycans (PGs) belonging to the syndecan family to attach to primary cells expressing RANTES G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) was investigated. We demonstrate that RANTES specifically binds to high and low affinity binding sites on human monocyte-derived macrophages (MDM). We show by co-immunoprecipitation experiments that RANTES is associated on these cells with syndecan-1 and syndecan-4, but neither with syndecan-2 nor with betaglycan, in addition to CD44 and its GPCRs, CCR5 and CCR1. Glycosaminidases pre-treatment of the monocyte derived-macrophages strongly decreases the binding of RANTES to syndecan-1 and syndecan-4 and also to CCR5, and abolishes RANTES binding to CD44. This suggests that glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are involved in RANTES binding to the PGs and that such bindings facilitate the subsequent interaction of RANTES with CCR5, on the MDM, characterized by low membrane expression of CCR5. The role of these interactions in the pathophysiology of RANTES deserves further study.  相似文献   

7.
Interactions between chemokines such as CCL5 and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are essential for creating haptotactic gradients to guide the migration of leukocytes into inflammatory sites, and the GAGs that interact with CCL5 with the highest affinity are heparan sulfates/heparin. The interaction between CCL5 and its receptor on monocytes, CCR1, is mediated through residues Arg-17 and -47 in CCL5, which overlap with the GAG-binding 44RKNR47 “BBXB” motifs. Here we report that heparin and tetrasaccharide fragments of heparin are able to inhibit CCL5-CCR1 binding, with IC50 values showing strong dependence on the pattern and extent of sulfation. Modeling of the CCL5-tetrasaccharide complexes suggested that interactions between specific sulfate and carboxylate groups of heparin and residues Arg-17 and -47 of the protein are essential for strong inhibition; tetrasaccharides lacking the specific sulfation pattern were found to preferentially bind CCL5 in positions less favorable for inhibition of the interaction with CCR1. Simulations of a 12-mer heparin fragment bound to CCL5 indicated that the oligosaccharide preferred to interact simultaneously with both 44RKNR47 motifs in the CCL5 homodimer and engaged residues Arg-47 and -17 from both chains. Direct engagement of these residues by the longer heparin oligosaccharide provides a rationalization for its effectiveness as an inhibitor of CCL5-CCR1 interaction. In this mode, histidine (His-23) may contribute to CCL5-GAG interactions when the pH drops just below neutral, as occurs during inflammation. Additionally, an examination of the contribution of pH to modulating CCL5-heparin interactions suggested a need for careful interpretation of experimental results when experiments are performed under non-physiological conditions.  相似文献   

8.
Chemokines direct immune cells toward sites of infection by establishing a gradient across the extracellular matrix of the tissue. This gradient is thought to be stabilized by ligation of chemokines to sulfated polysaccharides known as glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) that are found on the surface of endothelial and other cells as well as in the tissue matrix. GAGs interact with chemokines and in some cases cause them to aggregate. The interaction between cell surface GAGs and chemokines has also been postulated to play a role in the anti-HIV activity of some chemokines, including MIP-1beta. Since many proteins interact with GAGs by utilizing basic residues, we mutated R18, K45, R46, and K48 in MIP-1beta to investigate the role of these residues in GAG binding and CCR5 function. We find that no single amino acid substitution alone has a dramatic effect on heparin binding, although change at R46 has a moderate effect. However, binding to heparin is completely abrogated in a mutant (K45A/R46A/K48A) in which the entire "40's loop" has been neutralized. A functional study of these mutants reveals that the charged residues in this 40's loop, particularly K48 and R46, are critical mediators of MIP-1beta binding to its receptor CCR5. However, despite the partially overlapping function of the residues in the 40's loop in binding to both CCR5 and heparin, the presence of cell surface sugars does not appear to be necessary for the ability of MIP-1beta to function on its receptor CCR5, as enzymatic removal of GAGs from cells results in little effect on MIP-1beta activity. Because the means by which the chemokine gradient transmits information to the recruited cells is not well defined, we also mutated the basic residues in MIP(9), a truncated form of MIP-1beta that is impaired in its ability to dimerize, to probe whether the quaternary structure of this chemokine influences its ability to bind heparin. None of the truncated variants bound as well as the full-length proteins containing the same mutation, suggesting that the MIP-1beta dimer participates in heparin binding.  相似文献   

9.
The biological activity of granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor (GM-CSF) is modulated by the sulfated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) heparan sulfate and heparin. However, the molecular mechanisms involved in such interactions are still not completely understood. We have proposed previously that helix C, one of the four alpha-helices of human GM-CSF (hGM-CSF), contains a GAG-binding site in which positively charged residues are spatially positioned for interaction with the sulfate moieties of the GAGs (Wettreich, A., Sebollela, A., Carvalho, M. A., Azevedo, S. P., Borojevic, R., Ferreira, S. T., and Coelho-Sampaio, T. (1999) J. Biol. Chem. 274, 31468-31475). Protonation of two histidine residues (His83 and His87) in helix C of hGM-CSF appears to act as a pH-dependent molecular switch to control the interaction with GAGs. Based on these findings, we have now generated a triple mutant form of murine GM-CSF (mGM-CSF) in which three noncharged residues in helix C of the murine factor (Tyr83, Gln85, and Tyr87) were replaced by the corresponding basic residues present in hGM-CSF (His83, Lys85, and His87). Binding assays on heparin-Sepharose showed that, at acidic pH, the triple mutant mGM-CSF binds to immobilized heparin with significantly higher affinity than wild type (WT) mGM-CSF and that neither protein binds to the column at neutral pH. The fact that even WT mGM-CSF binds to heparin at acidic pH indicates the existence of a distinct, lower affinity heparin-binding site in the protein. Chemical modification of the single histidine residue (His15) located in helix A of WT mGM-CSF with diethyl pyrocarbonate totally abolished binding to immobilized heparin. Moreover, replacement of His15 for an alanine residue significantly reduced the affinity of mGM-CSF for heparin at pH 5.0 and completely blocked heparin binding to a synthetic peptide corresponding to helix A of GM-CSF. These results indicate a major role of histidine residues in the regulation of the binding of GM-CSF to GAGs, supporting the notion that an acidic microenvironment is required for GM-CSF-dependent regulation of target cells. In addition, our results provide insight into the molecular basis of the strict species specificity of the biological activity of GM-CSF.  相似文献   

10.
Human respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) F glycoprotein (RSV-F) can independently interact with immobilized heparin and facilitate both attachment to and infection of cells via an interaction with cellular heparan sulfate. RSV-glycosaminoglycan (GAG) interactions were evaluated using heparin-agarose affinity chromatography. RSV-F from A2- and B1/cp-52 (cp-52)-infected cell lysates, RSV-F derived from a recombinant vaccinia virus, and affinity-purified F protein all bound to and were specifically eluted from heparin columns. In infectivity inhibition studies, soluble GAGs decreased the infectivity of RSV A2 and cp-52, with bovine lung heparin exhibiting the highest specific activity against both A2 (50% effective dose [ED(50)] = 0.28 +/- 0.11 microg/ml) and cp-52 (ED(50) = 0.55 +/- 0. 14 microg/ml). Furthermore, enzymatic digestion of cell surface GAGs by heparin lyase I and heparin lyase III but not chondroitinase ABC resulted in a significant reduction in cp-52 infectivity. Moreover, bovine lung heparin inhibited radiolabeled A2 and cp-52 virus binding up to 90%. Taken together, these data suggest that RSV-F independently interacts with heparin/heparan sulfate and this type of interaction facilitates virus attachment and infectivity.  相似文献   

11.
A hallmark of autoimmunity and other chronic diseases is the overexpression of chemokines resulting in a detrimental local accumulation of proinflammatory immune cells. Chemokines play a pivotal role in cellular recruitment through interactions with both cell surface receptors and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs). Anti-inflammatory strategies aimed at neutralizing the chemokine system have to-date targeted inhibition of the receptor-ligand interaction with receptor antagonists. In this study, we describe a novel strategy to modulate the inflammatory process in vivo through mutation of the essential heparin-binding site of a proinflammatory chemokine, which abrogates the ability of the protein to form higher-order oligomers, but retains receptor activation. Using well-established protocols to induce inflammatory cell recruitment into the peritoneal cavity, bronchoalveolar air spaces, and CNS in mice, this non-GAG binding variant of RANTES/CCL5 designated [44AANA47]-RANTES demonstrated potent inhibitory capacity. Through a combination of techniques in vitro and in vivo, [44AANA47]-RANTES appears to act as a dominant-negative inhibitor for endogenous RANTES, thereby impairing cellular recruitment, not through a mechanism of desensitization. [44AANA47]-RANTES is unable to form higher-order oligomers (necessary for the biological activity of RANTES in vivo) and importantly forms nonfunctional heterodimers with the parent chemokine, RANTES. Therefore, although retaining receptor-binding capacity, altering the GAG-associated interactive site of a proinflammatory chemokine renders it a dominant-negative inhibitor, suggesting a powerful novel approach to generate disease-modifying anti-inflammatory reagents.  相似文献   

12.
We have studied the mechanisms by which the CC-chemokine RANTES can enhance the infectivities of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) and other enveloped viruses, when present at concentrations in excess of 500 ng/ml in vitro. Understanding the underlying mechanisms might throw light on fundamental processes of viral infection, in particular for HIV-1. Our principal findings are twofold: firstly, that oligomers of RANTES can cross-link enveloped viruses, including HIV-1, to cells via glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) present on the membranes of both virions and cells; secondly, that oligomers of RANTES interact with cell-surface GAGs to transduce a herbimycin A-sensitive signal which, over a period of several hours, renders the cells more permissive to infection by several viruses, including HIV-1. The enhancement mechanisms require that RANTES oligomerize either in solution or following binding to GAGs, since no viral infectivity enhancement is observed with a mutant form of the RANTES molecule that contains a single-amino-acid change (glutamic acid to serine at position 66) which abrogates oligomerization.  相似文献   

13.
We show here that cell surface glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are involved in the binding of stromal cell-derived factor (SDF)-1alpha to CD4(+)lymphoid CEM or monocytic U937 cells, inasmuch as pretreating the cells with heparitinase or chondroitinase inhibits SDF-1alpha binding by 40-41% and 31-35%, respectively. Soluble heparin or chondroitin sulfate partially but significantly inhibits SDF-1alpha binding to the cells by 45-52% and 42-56%, respectively, while dextran has no significant effect. Taken together, these results indicate the role of GAGs in SDF-1alpha attachment to the cells. However, the effects of heparitinase and chondroitinase as well as those of heparin and chondroitin sulfate are not additive, which suggests that SDF-1alpha may attach to the cells through different GAGs, and also through other ligands. Soluble mannan also inhibits SDF-1alpha binding to the cells by 30-33%. Additivity between this effect and that of heparin or chondroitin sulfate is observed. Therefore, beside GAGs, mannose-containing species may also be involved in SDF-1alpha attachment to the cells. Accordingly, SDF-1alpha specifically binds to heparin-agarose and mannose-divinylsulfone agarose affinity matrices, and these interactions are inhibited respectively by soluble heparin, chondroitin sulfate, and mannan. We have previously shown that gp120 of X4 strain HIV-1LAI presents specific carbohydrate-binding properties for mannosylated derivatives, including mannan, and for GAGs including heparin. The present data therefore indicate that, in the same manner as HIV-1 Env, SDF-1alpha can interact with GAGs and glycans at the cell surface.  相似文献   

14.
Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) on the surface of cultured cells are important in the first step of efficient respiratory syncytial virus (RSV) infection. We evaluated the importance of sulfation, the major biosynthetic modification of GAGs, using an improved recombinant green fluorescent protein-expressing RSV (rgRSV) to assay infection. Pretreatment of HEp-2 cells with 50 mM sodium chlorate, a selective inhibitor of sulfation, for 48 h prior to inoculation reduced the efficiency of rgRSV infection to 40%. Infection of a CHO mutant cell line deficient in N-sulfation was three times less efficient than infection of the parental CHO cell line, indicating that N-sulfation is important. In contrast, infection of a cell line deficient in 2-O-sulfation was as efficient as infection of the parental cell line, indicating that 2-O-sulfation is not required for RSV infection. Incubating RSV with the purified soluble heparin, the prototype GAG, before inoculation had previously been shown to neutralize its infectivity. Here we tested chemically modified heparin chains that lack their N-, C6-O-, or C2-O-sulfate groups. Only heparin chains lacking the N-sulfate group lost the ability to neutralize infection, confirming that N-sulfation, but not C6-O- or C2-O-sulfation, is important for RSV infection. Analysis of heparin fragments identified the 10-saccharide chain as the minimum size that can neutralize RSV infectivity. Taken together, these results show that, while sulfate modification is important for the ability of GAGs to mediate RSV infection, only certain sulfate groups are required. This specificity indicates that the role of cell surface GAGs in RSV infection is not based on a simple charge interaction between the virus and sulfate groups but instead involves a specific GAG structural configuration that includes N-sulfate and a minimum of 10 saccharide subunits. These elements, in addition to iduronic acid demonstrated previously (L. K. Hallak, P. L. Collins, W. Knudson, and M. E. Peeples, Virology 271:264-275, 2000), partially define cell surface molecules important for RSV infection of cultured cells.  相似文献   

15.
Chemokines are a group of small proteins that have a variety of functions, including the activation and recruitment of immune cells during episodes of inflammation. In common with many cytokines, it has been observed that chemokines have the potential to bind heparin-like glycosaminoglycan molecules, which are normally expressed on proteoglycan components of the cell surface and extracellular matrix. The significance of this interaction for chemokine activity remains a subject of debate. In this study, Chinese hamster ovary cells were transfected separately with the human chemokine receptors CCR1 and CCR5, and these receptors were shown to induce an intracytoplasmic Ca(2+) flux and cellular chemotaxis following stimulation with the natural CC chemokine ligands (MIP-1alpha, RANTES (regulated on activation normal T cell expressed), and MIP-1beta). In further experiments, mutant CHO cells, with a defect in normal glycosaminoglycan (GAG) expression, were also transfected with, and shown to express similar levels of, CCR1 and CCR5. Although these receptors were functional, it was found that the mutant cells required exposure to higher concentrations of ligands than the wild-type cells in order to produce the same intracytoplasmic Ca(2+) flux. Radioligand binding experiments demonstrated that specific chemokine receptors expressed by wild-type cells had a significantly greater affinity for MIP-1alpha than similar receptors expressed by GAG-deficient mutants. However, there was no significant difference between these cells in their affinity for RANTES or MIP-1beta. In conclusion, it has been demonstrated clearly that GAG expression is not necessary for the biological activity of the chemokines MIP-1alpha, RANTES, or MIP-1beta. However, the presence of cell surface GAGs does enhance the activity of low concentrations of these chemokines by a mechanism that appears to involve sequestration onto the cell surface.  相似文献   

16.
CXCL12 (SDF-1alpha) and CXCR4 are critical for embryonic development and cellular migration in adults. These proteins are involved in HIV-1 infection, cancer metastasis, and WHIM disease. Sequestration and presentation of CXCL12 to CXCR4 by glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) is proposed to be important for receptor activation. Mutagenesis has identified CXCL12 residues that bind to heparin. However, the molecular details of this interaction have not yet been determined. Here we demonstrate that soluble heparin and heparan sulfate negatively affect CXCL12-mediated in vitro chemotaxis. We also show that a cluster of basic residues in the dimer interface is required for chemotaxis and is a target for inhibition by heparin. We present structural evidence for binding of an unsaturated heparin disaccharide to CXCL12 attained through solution NMR spectroscopy and x-ray crystallography. Increasing concentrations of the disaccharide altered the two-dimensional (1)H-(15)N-HSQC spectra of CXCL12, which identified two clusters of residues. One cluster corresponds to beta-strands in the dimer interface. The second includes the amino-terminal loop and the alpha-helix. In the x-ray structure two unsaturated disaccharides are present. One is in the dimer interface with direct contacts between residues His(25), Lys(27), and Arg(41) of CXCL12 and the heparin disaccharide. The second disaccharide contacts Ala(20), Arg(21), Asn(30), and Lys(64). This is the first x-ray structure of a CXC class chemokine in complex with glycosaminoglycans. Based on the observation of two heparin binding sites, we propose a mechanism in which GAGs bind around CXCL12 dimers as they sequester and present CXCL12 to CXCR4.  相似文献   

17.
Efficient infection of cells by human papillomaviruses (HPVs) and pseudovirions requires primary interaction with cell surface proteoglycans with apparent preference for species carrying heparan sulfate (HS) side chains. To identify residues contributing to virus/cell interaction, we performed point mutational analysis of the HPV16 major capsid protein, L1, targeting surface-exposed amino acid residues. Replacement of lysine residues 278, 356, or 361 for alanine reduced cell binding and infectivity of pseudovirions. Various combinations of these amino acid exchanges further decreased cell attachment and infectivity with residual infectivity of less than 5% for the triple mutant, suggesting that these lysine residues cooperate in HS binding. Single, double, or triple exchanges for arginine did not impair infectivity, demonstrating that interaction is dependent on charge distribution rather than sequence-specific. The lysine residues are located within a pocket on the capsomere surface, which was previously proposed as the putative receptor binding site. Fab fragments of binding-neutralizing antibody H16.56E that recognize an epitope directly adjacent to lysine residues strongly reduced HS-mediated cell binding, further corroborating our findings. In contrast, mutation of basic surface residues located in the cleft between capsomeres outside this pocket did not significantly reduce interaction with HS or resulted in assembly-deficient proteins. Computer-simulated heparin docking suggested that all three lysine residues can form hydrogen bonds with 2-O-, 6-O-, and N-sulfate groups of a single HS molecule with a minimal saccharide domain length of eight monomer units. This prediction was experimentally confirmed in binding experiments using capsid protein, heparin molecules of defined length, and sulfate group modifications.  相似文献   

18.
A dot blot assay for detection of low amounts of heparin and sulfated glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) is described. The detection range is between 25 ng/ml and 1000 ng/ml of heparin. The assay is based on the interference of sulfated GAGs with the binding of a synthetic ligand (described in this paper) to defined receptors like collagen type V and histones. Ligand binding to type V collagen was suppressed specifically by heparin, but not by other sulfated GAGs like heparin sulfate and chondroitin sulfate. Ligand binding to histones was suppressed most strongly by heparin, but also by chondroitin sulfate. Hyaluronic acid did not interfere.  相似文献   

19.
Osteoprotegerin (OPG) is a decoy receptor for receptor activator of nuclear factor kappaB ligand (RANKL), a key inducer of osteoclastogenesis via its receptor RANK. We previously showed that RANK, RANKL, and OPG are able to form a tertiary complex and that OPG must be also considered as a direct effector of osteoclast functions. As OPG contains a heparin-binding domain, the present study investigated the interactions between OPG and glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) by surface plasmon resonance and their involvement in the OPG functions. Kinetic data demonstrated that OPG binds to heparin with a high-affinity (KD: 0.28 nM) and that the pre-incubation of OPG with heparin inhibits in a dose-dependent manner the OPG binding to the complex RANK-RANKL. GAGs from different structure/origin (heparan sulfate, dermatan sulfate, and chondroitin sulfate) exert similar activity on OPG binding. The contribution of the sulfation pattern and the size of the oligosaccharide were determined in this inhibitory mechanism. The results demonstrated that sulfation is essential in the OPG-blocking function of GAGs since a totally desulfated heparin loses its capacity to bind and to block OPG binding to RANKL. Moreover, a decasaccharide is the minimal structure that totally inhibits the OPG binding to the complex RANK-RANKL. Western blot analysis performed in 293 cells surexpressing RANKL revealed that the pre-incubation of OPG with these GAGs strongly inhibits the OPG-induced decrease of membrane RANKL half-life. These data support an essential function of the related glycosaminoglycans heparin and heparan sulfate in the activity of the triad RANK-RANKL-OPG.  相似文献   

20.
We have studied the effects of CC-chemokines on human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection, focusing on the infectivity enhancement caused by RANTES. High RANTES concentrations increase the infectivity of HIV-1 isolates that use CXC-chemokine receptor 4 for entry. However, RANTES can have a similar enhancing effect on macrophagetropic viruses that enter via CC-chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5), despite binding to the same receptor as the virus. Furthermore, RANTES enhances the infectivity of HIV-1 pseudotyped with the envelope glycoprotein of murine leukemia virus or vesicular stomatitis virus, showing that the mechanism of enhancement is independent of the route of virus-cell fusion. The enhancing effects of RANTES are not mediated via CCR5 or other known chemokine receptors and are not mimicked by MIP-1α or MIP-1β. The N-terminally modified derivative aminooxypentane RANTES (AOP-RANTES) efficiently inhibits HIV-1 infection via CCR5 but otherwise mimics RANTES by enhancing viral infectivity. There are two mechanisms of enhancement: one apparent when target cells are pretreated with RANTES (or AOP-RANTES) for several hours, and the other apparent when RANTES (or AOP-RANTES) is added during virus-cell absorption. We believe that the first mechanism is related to cellular activation by RANTES, whereas the second is an increase in virion attachment to target cells.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号