Structure-activity relationships of chemokines

Ian Clark‐Lewis(University of British Columbia), Key‐Sun Kim(University of Alberta), Krishnakumar Rajarathnam(University of Alberta), Jiang-Hong Gong(University of British Columbia), Béatrice Dewald(University of Bern), Bernhard Moser(University of Bern), Marco Baggiolini(University of Alberta), Brian D. Sykes(University of Alberta)
Journal of Leukocyte Biology
May 1, 1995
Cited by 357

Abstract

Structural analysis of chemokines has revealed that the alpha/beta structural-fold is highly conserved among both the CXC and CC chemokine classes. Although dimerization and aggregation is often observed, the chemokines function as monomers. The critical receptor binding regions are in the NH2-terminal 20 residues of the protein and are the least ordered in solution. The flexible NH2-terminal region is the most critical receptor binding site and a second site also exists in the loop that follows the two disulfides. The well-ordered regions are not directly involved in receptor binding but, along with the disulfides, they provide a scaffold that determines the conformation of the sites that are critical for receptor binding. These general requirements for function are common to all the chemokines. For the CC chemokines, receptor activation and receptor binding regions are separate within the 10 residue NH2-terminal region. This has allowed identification of high affinity analogs that do not activate the receptor and are potent antagonists.


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