Choi Won-Tak, Tian Shaomin, Dong Chang-Zhi, Kumar Santosh, Liu Dongxiang, Madani Navid, An Jing, Sodroski Joseph G, Huang Ziwei
Department of Biochemistry, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, Illinois 61801, USA.
J Virol. 2005 Dec;79(24):15398-404. doi: 10.1128/JVI.79.24.15398-15404.2005.
The chemokine receptor CXCR4 plays an important role as the receptor for the normal physiological function of stromal cell-derived factor 1alpha (SDF-1alpha) and the coreceptor for the entry of human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) into the cell. In a recent work (S. Tian et al., J. Virol. 79:12667-12673, 2005), we found that many residues throughout CXCR4 transmembrane (TM) and extracellular loop 2 domains are specifically involved in interaction with HIV-1 gp120, as most of these sites did not play a role in either SDF-1alpha binding or signaling. These results provided direct experimental evidence for the distinct functional sites on CXCR4 for HIV-1 and the normal ligand SDF-1alpha. To further understand the CXCR4-ligand interaction and to develop new CXCR4 inhibitors to block HIV-1 entry, we have recently generated a new family of unnatural chemokines, termed synthetically and modularly modified (SMM) chemokines, derived from the native sequence of SDF-1alpha or viral macrophage inflammatory protein II (vMIP-II). These SMM chemokines contain various de novo-designed sequence replacements and substitutions by d-amino acids and display more enhanced CXCR4 selectivity, binding affinities, and/or anti-HIV activities than natural chemokines. Using these novel CXCR4-targeting SMM chemokines as receptor probes, we conducted ligand binding site mapping experiments on a panel of site-directed mutants of CXCR4. Here, we provide the first experimental evidence demonstrating that SMM chemokines interact with many residues on CXCR4 TM and extracellular domains that are important for HIV-1 entry, but not SDF-1alpha binding or signaling. The preferential overlapping in the CXCR4 binding residues of SMM chemokines with HIV-1 over SDF-1alpha illustrates a mechanism for the potent HIV-1 inhibition by these SMM chemokines. The discovery of distinct functional sites or conformational states influenced by these receptor sites mediating different functions of the natural ligand versus the viral or synthetic ligands has important implications for drug discovery, since the sites shared by SMM chemokines and HIV-1 but not by SDF-1alpha can be targeted for the development of selective HIV-1 inhibitors devoid of interference with normal SDF-1alpha function.
趋化因子受体CXCR4作为基质细胞衍生因子1α(SDF-1α)正常生理功能的受体以及人类免疫缺陷病毒1型(HIV-1)进入细胞的共受体发挥着重要作用。在最近的一项研究(S. Tian等人,《病毒学杂志》79:12667 - 12673,2005年)中,我们发现CXCR4跨膜(TM)和细胞外环2结构域中的许多残基特别参与与HIV-1 gp120的相互作用,因为这些位点中的大多数在SDF-1α结合或信号传导中不起作用。这些结果为CXCR4上HIV-1和正常配体SDF-1α的不同功能位点提供了直接的实验证据。为了进一步了解CXCR4 - 配体相互作用并开发新的CXCR4抑制剂以阻断HIV-1进入,我们最近生成了一个新的非天然趋化因子家族,称为合成和模块化修饰(SMM)趋化因子,其源自SDF-1α或病毒巨噬细胞炎性蛋白II(vMIP-II)的天然序列。这些SMM趋化因子包含各种从头设计的序列替换以及d - 氨基酸的取代,并且与天然趋化因子相比,表现出更强的CXCR4选择性、结合亲和力和/或抗HIV活性。使用这些新型靶向CXCR4的SMM趋化因子作为受体探针,我们对一组CXCR4的定点突变体进行了配体结合位点映射实验。在此,我们提供了首个实验证据,证明SMM趋化因子与CXCR4 TM和细胞外结构域上许多对HIV-1进入很重要但对SDF-1α结合或信号传导不重要的残基相互作用。SMM趋化因子与HIV-1在CXCR4结合残基上相较于SDF-1α的优先重叠说明了这些SMM趋化因子有效抑制HIV-1的机制。发现受这些受体位点影响的不同功能位点或构象状态介导天然配体与病毒或合成配体的不同功能,这对药物发现具有重要意义,因为SMM趋化因子与HIV-1共有的但SDF-1α不具有的位点可作为开发选择性HIV-1抑制剂的靶点,而不会干扰正常的SDF-1α功能。