Structural Linkage between Ligand Discrimination and Receptor Activation by Type I Interferons
Author(s) -
Christoph Thomas,
Ignacio Moraga,
Doron Levin,
Peter O. Krutzik,
Yulia Podoplelova,
Angelica Trejo,
Choong-Ho Lee,
Ganit Yarden,
Susan E. Vleck,
Jeffrey S. Glenn,
Garry P. Nolan,
Jacob Piehler,
Gideon Schreiber,
K. Christopher García
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
cell
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 26.304
H-Index - 776
eISSN - 1097-4172
pISSN - 0092-8674
DOI - 10.1016/j.cell.2011.06.048
Subject(s) - biology , linkage (software) , genetics , receptor , ligand (biochemistry) , computational biology , gene
Type I Interferons (IFNs) are important cytokines for innate immunity against viruses and cancer. Sixteen human type I IFN variants signal through the same cell-surface receptors, IFNAR1 and IFNAR2, yet they can evoke markedly different physiological effects. The crystal structures of two human type I IFN ternary signaling complexes containing IFNα2 and IFNω reveal recognition modes and heterotrimeric architectures that are unique among the cytokine receptor superfamily but conserved between different type I IFNs. Receptor-ligand cross-reactivity is enabled by conserved receptor-ligand "anchor points" interspersed among ligand-specific interactions that "tune" the relative IFN-binding affinities, in an apparent extracellular "ligand proofreading" mechanism that modulates biological activity. Functional differences between IFNs are linked to their respective receptor recognition chemistries, in concert with a ligand-induced conformational change in IFNAR1, that collectively control signal initiation and complex stability, ultimately regulating differential STAT phosphorylation profiles, receptor internalization rates, and downstream gene expression patterns.
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