Structural changes of the ligand and of the receptor alters the receptor preference for neutrophil activating peptides starting with a 3 formylmethionyl group

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Structural changes of the ligand and of the receptor alters the receptor preference for neutrophil activating peptides starting with a 3 formylmethionyl group. / Forsman, Huamei; Winther, Malene; Gabl, Michael; Skovbakke, Sarah Line; Boulay, Francois; Rabiet, Marie-Josèphe ; Dahlgren, Claes.

I: B B A - Molecular Cell Research, Bind 1853, Nr. 1, 2015, s. 192-200.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Forsman, H, Winther, M, Gabl, M, Skovbakke, SL, Boulay, F, Rabiet, M-J & Dahlgren, C 2015, 'Structural changes of the ligand and of the receptor alters the receptor preference for neutrophil activating peptides starting with a 3 formylmethionyl group', B B A - Molecular Cell Research, bind 1853, nr. 1, s. 192-200. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbamcr.2014.10.021

APA

Forsman, H., Winther, M., Gabl, M., Skovbakke, S. L., Boulay, F., Rabiet, M-J., & Dahlgren, C. (2015). Structural changes of the ligand and of the receptor alters the receptor preference for neutrophil activating peptides starting with a 3 formylmethionyl group. B B A - Molecular Cell Research, 1853(1), 192-200. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbamcr.2014.10.021

Vancouver

Forsman H, Winther M, Gabl M, Skovbakke SL, Boulay F, Rabiet M-J o.a. Structural changes of the ligand and of the receptor alters the receptor preference for neutrophil activating peptides starting with a 3 formylmethionyl group. B B A - Molecular Cell Research. 2015;1853(1):192-200. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bbamcr.2014.10.021

Author

Forsman, Huamei ; Winther, Malene ; Gabl, Michael ; Skovbakke, Sarah Line ; Boulay, Francois ; Rabiet, Marie-Josèphe ; Dahlgren, Claes. / Structural changes of the ligand and of the receptor alters the receptor preference for neutrophil activating peptides starting with a 3 formylmethionyl group. I: B B A - Molecular Cell Research. 2015 ; Bind 1853, Nr. 1. s. 192-200.

Bibtex

@article{a13041d376914ae2be7d4252dc3c6d52,
title = "Structural changes of the ligand and of the receptor alters the receptor preference for neutrophil activating peptides starting with a 3 formylmethionyl group",
abstract = "Pathogenic Staphylococcus aureus strains produce N-formylmethionyl containing peptides, of which the tetrapeptide fMIFL is a potent activator of the neutrophil formyl peptide receptor 1 (FPR1) and the PSMα2 peptide is a potent activator of the closely related FPR2. Variants derived from these two peptide activators were used to disclose the structural determinants for receptor interaction. Removal of five amino acids from the C-terminus of PSMα2 gave rise to a peptide that had lost the receptor-independent neutrophil permeabilizing effect, whereas neutrophil activation capacity as well as its preference for FPR2 was retained. Shorter peptides, PSMα21–10 and PSMα21–5, activate neutrophils, but the receptor preference for these peptides was switched to FPR1.The fMIFL-PSM5–16 peptide, in which the N-terminus of PSMα21–16 was replaced by the sequence fMIFL, was a dual agonist for FPR1/FPR2, whereas fMIFL-PSM5–10 preferred FPR1 to FPR2. Further, an Ile residue was identified as a key determinant for interaction with FPR2. A chimeric receptor in which the cytoplasmic tail of FPR1 was replaced by the corresponding part of FPR2 lost the ability to recognize FPR1 agonists, but gained function in relation to FPR2 agonists.Taken together, our data demonstrate that the C-terminus of the PSMα2 peptide plays a critical role for its cytotoxicity, but is not essential for the receptor-mediated pro-inflammatory activity. More importantly, we show that the amino acids present in the C-terminus, which are not supposed to occupy the agonist-binding pocket in the FPRs, are of importance for the choice of receptor.",
author = "Huamei Forsman and Malene Winther and Michael Gabl and Skovbakke, {Sarah Line} and Francois Boulay and Marie-Jos{\`e}phe Rabiet and Claes Dahlgren",
year = "2015",
doi = "10.1016/j.bbamcr.2014.10.021",
language = "English",
volume = "1853",
pages = "192--200",
journal = "B B A - Molecular Cell Research",
issn = "0167-4889",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Structural changes of the ligand and of the receptor alters the receptor preference for neutrophil activating peptides starting with a 3 formylmethionyl group

AU - Forsman, Huamei

AU - Winther, Malene

AU - Gabl, Michael

AU - Skovbakke, Sarah Line

AU - Boulay, Francois

AU - Rabiet, Marie-Josèphe

AU - Dahlgren, Claes

PY - 2015

Y1 - 2015

N2 - Pathogenic Staphylococcus aureus strains produce N-formylmethionyl containing peptides, of which the tetrapeptide fMIFL is a potent activator of the neutrophil formyl peptide receptor 1 (FPR1) and the PSMα2 peptide is a potent activator of the closely related FPR2. Variants derived from these two peptide activators were used to disclose the structural determinants for receptor interaction. Removal of five amino acids from the C-terminus of PSMα2 gave rise to a peptide that had lost the receptor-independent neutrophil permeabilizing effect, whereas neutrophil activation capacity as well as its preference for FPR2 was retained. Shorter peptides, PSMα21–10 and PSMα21–5, activate neutrophils, but the receptor preference for these peptides was switched to FPR1.The fMIFL-PSM5–16 peptide, in which the N-terminus of PSMα21–16 was replaced by the sequence fMIFL, was a dual agonist for FPR1/FPR2, whereas fMIFL-PSM5–10 preferred FPR1 to FPR2. Further, an Ile residue was identified as a key determinant for interaction with FPR2. A chimeric receptor in which the cytoplasmic tail of FPR1 was replaced by the corresponding part of FPR2 lost the ability to recognize FPR1 agonists, but gained function in relation to FPR2 agonists.Taken together, our data demonstrate that the C-terminus of the PSMα2 peptide plays a critical role for its cytotoxicity, but is not essential for the receptor-mediated pro-inflammatory activity. More importantly, we show that the amino acids present in the C-terminus, which are not supposed to occupy the agonist-binding pocket in the FPRs, are of importance for the choice of receptor.

AB - Pathogenic Staphylococcus aureus strains produce N-formylmethionyl containing peptides, of which the tetrapeptide fMIFL is a potent activator of the neutrophil formyl peptide receptor 1 (FPR1) and the PSMα2 peptide is a potent activator of the closely related FPR2. Variants derived from these two peptide activators were used to disclose the structural determinants for receptor interaction. Removal of five amino acids from the C-terminus of PSMα2 gave rise to a peptide that had lost the receptor-independent neutrophil permeabilizing effect, whereas neutrophil activation capacity as well as its preference for FPR2 was retained. Shorter peptides, PSMα21–10 and PSMα21–5, activate neutrophils, but the receptor preference for these peptides was switched to FPR1.The fMIFL-PSM5–16 peptide, in which the N-terminus of PSMα21–16 was replaced by the sequence fMIFL, was a dual agonist for FPR1/FPR2, whereas fMIFL-PSM5–10 preferred FPR1 to FPR2. Further, an Ile residue was identified as a key determinant for interaction with FPR2. A chimeric receptor in which the cytoplasmic tail of FPR1 was replaced by the corresponding part of FPR2 lost the ability to recognize FPR1 agonists, but gained function in relation to FPR2 agonists.Taken together, our data demonstrate that the C-terminus of the PSMα2 peptide plays a critical role for its cytotoxicity, but is not essential for the receptor-mediated pro-inflammatory activity. More importantly, we show that the amino acids present in the C-terminus, which are not supposed to occupy the agonist-binding pocket in the FPRs, are of importance for the choice of receptor.

U2 - 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2014.10.021

DO - 10.1016/j.bbamcr.2014.10.021

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25447672

VL - 1853

SP - 192

EP - 200

JO - B B A - Molecular Cell Research

JF - B B A - Molecular Cell Research

SN - 0167-4889

IS - 1

ER -

ID: 127135730