Publication | Open Access
Platelet Factor 4 and Interleukin-8 CXC Chemokine Heterodimer Formation Modulates Function at the Quaternary Structural Level
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Citations
43
References
2004
Year
Chemokine BiologyNmr SpectroscopyImmunologyBlood CellImmunologic MechanismIl8-induced MigrationInflammationHematologyCell SignalingMolecular SignalingQuaternary Structural LevelGranulocyteAutoimmunityCell BiologyPf4/il8 HeterodimerizationThrombopoiesisCytokinePlatelet ActivationSignal TransductionBlood PlateletPlatelet Factor 4Cellular Immune ResponseSystems BiologyMedicine
The apparent complexity of biology increases as more biomolecular interactions that mediate function become known. We have used NMR spectroscopy and molecular modeling to provide direct evidence that tetrameric platelet factor-4 (PF4) and dimeric interleukin-8 (IL8), two members of the CXC chemokine family, readily interact by exchanging subunits and forming heterodimers via extension of their antiparallel beta-sheet domains. We further demonstrate using functional assays that PF4/IL8 heterodimerization has a direct and significant consequence on the biological activity of both chemokines. Formation of heterodimers enhances the anti-proliferative effect of PF4 on endothelial cells in culture, as well as the IL8-induced migration of CXCR2 vector-transfected Baf3 cells. These results suggest that CXC chemokine biology, and perhaps cytokine biology in general, may be functionally modulated at the molecular level by formation of heterodimers. This concept, in turn, has implications for designing chemokine/cytokine variants with modified biological properties.
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