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High-Affinity Binding of Chemokine Analogs that Display Ligand Bias at the HIV-1 Coreceptor CCR5
- Source :
- Biophys J, Biophysical Journal, Vol. 117, No 5 (2019) pp. 903-919
- Publication Year :
- 2019
-
Abstract
- The chemokine receptor CCR5 is a drug target to prevent transmission of HIV/AIDS. We studied four analogs of the native chemokine regulated, on activation, normal T-cell-expressed, and secreted (RANTES) (CCL5) that have anti-HIV potencies of around 25 pM, which is more than four orders of magnitude higher than that of RANTES itself. It has been hypothesized that the ultrahigh potency of the analogs is due to their ability to bind populations of receptors not accessible to native chemokines. To test this hypothesis, we developed a homogeneous dual-color fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy assay for saturation- and competition-binding experiments. The fluorescence cross-correlation spectroscopy assay has the advantage that it does not rely on competition with radioactively labeled native chemokines used in conventional assays. We prepared site-specifically labeled fluorescent analogs using native chemical ligation of synthetic peptides, followed by bioorthogonal fluorescent labeling. We engineered a mammalian cell expression construct to provide fluorescently labeled CCR5, which was purified using a tandem immunoaffinity and size-exclusion chromatography approach to obtain monomeric fluorescent CCR5 in detergent solution. We found subnanomolar binding affinities for the two analogs 5P12-RANTES and 5P14-RANTES and about 20-fold reduced affinities for PSC-RANTES and 6P4-RANTES. Using homologous and heterologous competition experiments with unlabeled chemokine analogs, we conclude that the analogs all bind at the same binding site, whereas the native chemokines (RANTES and MIP-1α) fail to displace bound fluorescent analogs even at tens of micromolar concentrations. Our results can be rationalized with de novo structural models of the N-terminal tails of the synthetic chemokines that adopt a different binding mode as compared to the parent compound.
- Subjects :
- Chemokine
Receptors, CCR5
Chemokine receptor CCR5
Biophysics
ddc:616.07
Ligands
Binding, Competitive
Models, Biological
CCL5
03 medical and health sciences
0302 clinical medicine
Competitive
Chemokine CCL5/metabolism
Models
Receptors
Humans
Binding site
Receptor
Chemokine CCL5
030304 developmental biology
HIV-1/metabolism
0303 health sciences
biology
Chemistry
Articles
Binding
Ligand (biochemistry)
Native chemical ligation
Biological
3. Good health
Chemokines/metabolism
HEK293 Cells
Biochemistry
CCR5/metabolism
ddc:540
biology.protein
HIV-1
Bioorthogonal chemistry
Chemokines
030217 neurology & neurosurgery
Protein Binding
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 15420086 and 00063495
- Volume :
- 117
- Issue :
- 5
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Biophysical journal
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....225a811adaa90ff9447737bb91556beb