Literature DB >> 32145391

Purification of native CCL7 and its functional interaction with selected chemokine receptors.

Marina V Goncharuk1, Debarati Roy2, Maxim A Dubinnyi3, Kirill D Nadezhdin3, Ashish Srivastava2, Mithu Baidya2, Hemlata Dwivedi-Agnihotri2, Alexander S Arseniev3, Arun K Shukla4.   

Abstract

Chemokine receptors form a major sub-family of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and they are involved in a number of cellular and physiological processes related to our immune response and regulation. A better structural understanding of ligand-binding, activation, signaling and regulation of chemokine receptors is very important to design potentially therapeutic interventions for human disorders arising from aberrant chemokine signaling. One of the key limitations in probing the structural details of chemokine receptors is the availability of large amounts of purified, homogenous and fully functional chemokine ligands, and the commercially available products, are not affordable for in-depth structural studies. Moreover, production of uniformly isotope-labeled chemokines, for example, suitable for NMR-based structural investigation, also remains challenging. Here, we have designed a streamlined approach to express and purify the human chemokine CCL7 as well as its 15N-, 15N/13C-, 2H/15N/13C- isotope-labeled derivatives, at milligram levels using E. coli expression system. Purified CCL7 not only maintains a well-folded three-dimensional structure as analyzed using circular dichroism and 1H/15N NMR but it also induces coupling of heterotrimeric G-proteins and β-arrestins for selected chemokine receptors in cellular system. We compared cAMP response induced by histidine tagged CCL7 and native CCL7 and found that modification of the N-terminus of CCL7 compromises its functionality. Our strategy presented here may be applicable to other chemokines and therefore, provide a potentially generic and cost-effective approach to produce chemokines in large amounts for functional and structural studies.
Copyright © 2020 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Arrestins; Atypical chemokine receptors; Biased agonism; Chemokine; G-protein; GPCR; Isotope labeling; NMR spectroscopy; Recombinant protein

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2020        PMID: 32145391      PMCID: PMC7212033          DOI: 10.1016/j.pep.2020.105617

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Protein Expr Purif        ISSN: 1046-5928            Impact factor:   1.650


  20 in total

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10.  CARD domain of rat RIP2 kinase: Refolding, solution structure, pH-dependent behavior and protein-protein interactions.

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  2 in total

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2.  Genetically encoded intrabody sensors report the interaction and trafficking of β-arrestin 1 upon activation of G-protein-coupled receptors.

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  2 in total

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