| Literature DB >> 28381538 |
Philipp von Hundelshausen1,2, Stijn M Agten3, Veit Eckardt1, Xavier Blanchet1, Martin M Schmitt1, Hans Ippel3, Carlos Neideck1, Kiril Bidzhekov1, Julian Leberzammer1, Kanin Wichapong3, Alexander Faussner1, Maik Drechsler1, Jochen Grommes4, Johanna P van Geffen3, He Li1, Almudena Ortega-Gomez1, Remco T A Megens1, Ronald Naumann5, Ingrid Dijkgraaf3, Gerry A F Nicolaes3, Yvonne Döring1,2, Oliver Soehnlein1,2,6, Esther Lutgens1,2,7, Johan W M Heemskerk2, Rory R Koenen1,3, Kevin H Mayo3,8, Tilman M Hackeng3, Christian Weber9,2,3.
Abstract
Chemokines orchestrate leukocyte trafficking and function in health and disease. Heterophilic interactions between chemokines in a given microenvironment may amplify, inhibit, or modulate their activity; however, a systematic evaluation of the chemokine interactome has not been performed. We used immunoligand blotting and surface plasmon resonance to obtain a comprehensive map of chemokine-chemokine interactions and to confirm their specificity. Structure-function analyses revealed that chemokine activity can be enhanced by CC-type heterodimers but inhibited by CXC-type heterodimers. Functional synergism was achieved through receptor heteromerization induced by CCL5-CCL17 or receptor retention at the cell surface via auxiliary proteoglycan binding of CCL5-CXCL4. In contrast, inhibitory activity relied on conformational changes (in CXCL12), affecting receptor signaling. Obligate CC-type heterodimers showed high efficacy and potency and drove acute lung injury and atherosclerosis, processes abrogated by specific CCL5-derived peptide inhibitors or knock-in of an interaction-deficient CXCL4 variant. Atheroprotective effects of CCL17 deficiency were phenocopied by a CCL5-derived peptide disrupting CCL5-CCL17 heterodimers, whereas a CCL5 α-helix peptide mimicked inhibitory effects on CXCL12-driven platelet aggregation. Thus, formation of specific chemokine heterodimers differentially dictates functional activity and can be exploited for therapeutic targeting.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28381538 DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.aah6650
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Transl Med ISSN: 1946-6234 Impact factor: 17.956