Asymmetric usage of antagonist charged residues drives interleukin-5 receptor recruitment but is insufficient for receptor activation.

2006 
The cyclic peptide AF17121 (VDECWRIIASHTWFCAEE) is a library-derived antagonist for human Interleukin-5 receptor R (IL5RR). We have previously demonstrated that AF17121 mimics Interleukin-5 (IL5) by binding in a region of IL5RR that overlaps the IL5 binding epitope. In the present study, to explore the functional importance of the amino acid residues of AF17121 required for effective binding to, and antagonism of, IL5RR, each charged residue was subjected to site-directed mutagenesis and examined for IL5RR interaction by using a surface plasmon resonance biosensor. One residue, Arg 6 , was found to be essential for receptor antagonism; its replacement with either alanine or lysine completely abolished the interaction between AF17121 and IL5RR. Other charged residues play modulatory roles. One class consists of the N-terminal acidic cluster (Asp 2 and Glu 3 ) for which alanine replacement decreased the association rate. A second class consists of His 11 and the C-terminal acidic cluster (Glu 17 and Glu 18 ) for which alanine replacement increased the dissociation rate. Binding model analysis of the mutants of the latter class of residues indicated the existence of conformational rearrangement during the interaction. On the basis of these results, we propose a model in which Arg 6 and N-terminal acidic residues drive the encounter complex, while Arg 6 , His 11 , and C-terminal acidic residues are involved in stabilizing the final complex. These data argue that the charged residues of AF17121 are utilized asymmetrically in the pathway of inhibitor-receptor complex formation to deactivate the receptor function. The results also help focus emerging models for the mechanism by which IL5 activates the IL5RR-‚c receptor system.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    31
    References
    15
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []