| Literature DB >> 31774398 |
Jonathan Martinez-Fabregas1, Stephan Wilmes1, Luopin Wang2, Majid Kazemian2, Suman Mitra3, Ignacio Moraga1, Maximillian Hafer4, Elizabeth Pohler1, Juliane Lokau5, Christoph Garbers5, Adeline Cozzani3, Paul K Fyfe1, Jacob Piehler4.
Abstract
Cytokines activate signaling via assembly of cell surface receptors, but it is unclear whether modulation of cytokine-receptor binding parameters can modify biological outcomes. We have engineered IL-6 variants with different affinities to gp130 to investigate how cytokine receptor binding dwell-times influence functional selectivity. Engineered IL-6 variants showed a range of signaling amplitudes and induced biased signaling, with changes in receptor binding dwell-times affecting more profoundly STAT1 than STAT3 phosphorylation. We show that this differential signaling arises from defective translocation of ligand-gp130 complexes to the endosomal compartment and competitive STAT1/STAT3 binding to phospho-tyrosines in gp130, and results in unique patterns of STAT3 binding to chromatin. This leads to a graded gene expression response and differences in ex vivo differentiation of Th17, Th1 and Treg cells. These results provide a molecular understanding of signaling biased by cytokine receptors, and demonstrate that manipulation of signaling thresholds is a useful strategy to decouple cytokine functional pleiotropy.Entities:
Keywords: bias signaling; cytokine engineering; cytokine signaling; endosomal traffic; functional pleiotropy; human; immunology; inflammation
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Year: 2019 PMID: 31774398 PMCID: PMC6914340 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.49314
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140