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Structure–Function Studies Using Deletion Mutants Identify Domains of gC1qR/p33 as Potential Therapeutic Targets for Vascular Permeability and Inflammation

The endothelial cell receptor complex for kininogen (HK) comprises gC1qR, cytokeratin 1, and urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor and is essential for activation of the kinin system that leads to bradykinin (BK) generation. Of these, gC1qR/p33 constitutes a high affinity site for HK – the B...

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Autores principales: Ghebrehiwet, Berhane, Jesty, Jolyon, Xu, Sulan, Vinayagasundaram, Rama, Vinayagasundaram, Uma, Ji, Yan, Valentino, Alisa, Hosszu, Kinga K., Mathew, Sally, Joseph, Kusumam, Kaplan, Allen P., Peerschke, Ellinor I. B.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Research Foundation 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3265123/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22282702
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2011.00058
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author Ghebrehiwet, Berhane
Jesty, Jolyon
Xu, Sulan
Vinayagasundaram, Rama
Vinayagasundaram, Uma
Ji, Yan
Valentino, Alisa
Hosszu, Kinga K.
Mathew, Sally
Joseph, Kusumam
Kaplan, Allen P.
Peerschke, Ellinor I. B.
author_facet Ghebrehiwet, Berhane
Jesty, Jolyon
Xu, Sulan
Vinayagasundaram, Rama
Vinayagasundaram, Uma
Ji, Yan
Valentino, Alisa
Hosszu, Kinga K.
Mathew, Sally
Joseph, Kusumam
Kaplan, Allen P.
Peerschke, Ellinor I. B.
author_sort Ghebrehiwet, Berhane
collection PubMed
description The endothelial cell receptor complex for kininogen (HK) comprises gC1qR, cytokeratin 1, and urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor and is essential for activation of the kinin system that leads to bradykinin (BK) generation. Of these, gC1qR/p33 constitutes a high affinity site for HK – the BK precursor – and is therefore critical for the assembly of the kinin-generating cascade. Previous studies have identified a putative HK site within the C-terminal domain (residues 204–218) of gC1qR recognized by mAb 74.5.2. In these studies, we used information from the crystal structure of gC1qR, to engineer several deletion (Δ) mutants and test their ability to bind and/or support BK generation. While deletion of residues 204–218 (gC1qRΔ204–218), showed significantly reduced binding to HK, BK generation was not affected when tested by a sensitive bradykinin immunoassay. In fact, all of the gC1qR deletion mutants supported BK generation with the exception of gC1qRΔ154–162 and a point mutation in which Trp 233 was substituted with Gly. Binding studies also identified the existence of two additional sites at residues 144–162 and 190–202. Moreover, binding of HK to a synthetic peptide 190–202 was inhibited by mAbs 48 and 83, but not by mAb 74.5.2. Since a single residue separates domains 190–202 and 204–218, they may be part of a highly stable HK binding pocket and therefore a potential target for drug design to prevent vascular permeability and inflammation.
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spelling pubmed-32651232012-01-24 Structure–Function Studies Using Deletion Mutants Identify Domains of gC1qR/p33 as Potential Therapeutic Targets for Vascular Permeability and Inflammation Ghebrehiwet, Berhane Jesty, Jolyon Xu, Sulan Vinayagasundaram, Rama Vinayagasundaram, Uma Ji, Yan Valentino, Alisa Hosszu, Kinga K. Mathew, Sally Joseph, Kusumam Kaplan, Allen P. Peerschke, Ellinor I. B. Front Immunol Immunology The endothelial cell receptor complex for kininogen (HK) comprises gC1qR, cytokeratin 1, and urokinase-type plasminogen activator receptor and is essential for activation of the kinin system that leads to bradykinin (BK) generation. Of these, gC1qR/p33 constitutes a high affinity site for HK – the BK precursor – and is therefore critical for the assembly of the kinin-generating cascade. Previous studies have identified a putative HK site within the C-terminal domain (residues 204–218) of gC1qR recognized by mAb 74.5.2. In these studies, we used information from the crystal structure of gC1qR, to engineer several deletion (Δ) mutants and test their ability to bind and/or support BK generation. While deletion of residues 204–218 (gC1qRΔ204–218), showed significantly reduced binding to HK, BK generation was not affected when tested by a sensitive bradykinin immunoassay. In fact, all of the gC1qR deletion mutants supported BK generation with the exception of gC1qRΔ154–162 and a point mutation in which Trp 233 was substituted with Gly. Binding studies also identified the existence of two additional sites at residues 144–162 and 190–202. Moreover, binding of HK to a synthetic peptide 190–202 was inhibited by mAbs 48 and 83, but not by mAb 74.5.2. Since a single residue separates domains 190–202 and 204–218, they may be part of a highly stable HK binding pocket and therefore a potential target for drug design to prevent vascular permeability and inflammation. Frontiers Research Foundation 2011-11-15 /pmc/articles/PMC3265123/ /pubmed/22282702 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2011.00058 Text en Copyright © 2011 Ghebrehiwet, Jesty, Xu, Vinayagasundaram, Vinayagasundaram, Ji, Valentino, Hosszu, Mathew, Joseph, Kaplan and Peerschke. http://www.frontiersin.org/licenseagreement This is an open-access article subject to a non-exclusive license between the authors and Frontiers Media SA, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in other forums, provided the original authors and source are credited and other Frontiers conditions are complied with.
spellingShingle Immunology
Ghebrehiwet, Berhane
Jesty, Jolyon
Xu, Sulan
Vinayagasundaram, Rama
Vinayagasundaram, Uma
Ji, Yan
Valentino, Alisa
Hosszu, Kinga K.
Mathew, Sally
Joseph, Kusumam
Kaplan, Allen P.
Peerschke, Ellinor I. B.
Structure–Function Studies Using Deletion Mutants Identify Domains of gC1qR/p33 as Potential Therapeutic Targets for Vascular Permeability and Inflammation
title Structure–Function Studies Using Deletion Mutants Identify Domains of gC1qR/p33 as Potential Therapeutic Targets for Vascular Permeability and Inflammation
title_full Structure–Function Studies Using Deletion Mutants Identify Domains of gC1qR/p33 as Potential Therapeutic Targets for Vascular Permeability and Inflammation
title_fullStr Structure–Function Studies Using Deletion Mutants Identify Domains of gC1qR/p33 as Potential Therapeutic Targets for Vascular Permeability and Inflammation
title_full_unstemmed Structure–Function Studies Using Deletion Mutants Identify Domains of gC1qR/p33 as Potential Therapeutic Targets for Vascular Permeability and Inflammation
title_short Structure–Function Studies Using Deletion Mutants Identify Domains of gC1qR/p33 as Potential Therapeutic Targets for Vascular Permeability and Inflammation
title_sort structure–function studies using deletion mutants identify domains of gc1qr/p33 as potential therapeutic targets for vascular permeability and inflammation
topic Immunology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3265123/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22282702
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fimmu.2011.00058
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