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Antagonism of human CC ‐chemokine receptor 4 can be achieved through three distinct binding sites on the receptor
Author(s) -
Slack Robert J.,
Russell Linda J.,
Barton Nick P.,
Weston Cathryn,
Nalesso Giovanna,
Thompson SallyAnne,
Allen Morven,
Chen Yu Hua,
Barnes Ashley,
Hodgson Simon T.,
Hall David A.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
pharmacology research and perspectives
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.975
H-Index - 27
ISSN - 2052-1707
DOI - 10.1002/prp2.19
Subject(s) - allosteric regulation , receptor , binding site , antagonism , antagonist , chemokine receptor , chemokine , chemistry , biology , cc chemokine receptors , pharmacology , computational biology , stereochemistry , biochemistry
Chemokine receptor antagonists appear to access two distinct binding sites on different members of this receptor family. One class of CCR 4 antagonists has been suggested to bind to a site accessible from the cytoplasm while a second class did not bind to this site. In this report, we demonstrate that antagonists representing a variety of structural classes bind to two distinct allosteric sites on CCR 4. The effects of pairs of low‐molecular weight and/or chemokine CCR 4 antagonists were evaluated on CCL 17‐ and CCL 22‐induced responses of human CCR 4 + T cells. This provided an initial grouping of the antagonists into sets which appeared to bind to distinct binding sites. Binding studies were then performed with radioligands from each set to confirm these groupings. Some novel receptor theory was developed to allow the interpretation of the effects of the antagonist combinations. The theory indicates that, generally, the concentration‐ratio of a pair of competing allosteric modulators is maximally the sum of their individual effects while that of two modulators acting at different sites is likely to be greater than their sum. The low‐molecular weight antagonists could be grouped into two sets on the basis of the functional and binding experiments. The antagonistic chemokines formed a third set whose behaviour was consistent with that of simple competitive antagonists. These studies indicate that there are two allosteric regulatory sites on CCR 4.

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