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G protein subtype–specific signaling bias in a series of CCR5 chemokine analogs
Author(s) -
Emily Lorenzen,
Emilie Ceraudo,
Yamina A. Berchiche,
Carlos A. Rico,
Alexandre Fürstenberg,
Thomas P. Sakmar,
Thomas Huber
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
science signaling
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.659
H-Index - 154
eISSN - 1937-9145
pISSN - 1945-0877
DOI - 10.1126/scisignal.aao6152
Subject(s) - ccl5 , ccr1 , chemokine , chemokine receptor , g protein coupled receptor , ccr3 , microbiology and biotechnology , g protein , xcl2 , chemokine receptor ccr5 , receptor , biology , signal transduction , chemistry , t cell , biochemistry , immunology , immune system , il 2 receptor
Chemokines and some chemical analogs of chemokines prevent cellular HIV-1 entry when bound to the HIV-1 coreceptors C-C chemokine receptor 5 (CCR5) or C-X-C chemokine receptor 4 (CXCR4), which are G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). The ideal HIV-1 entry blocker targeting the coreceptors would display ligand bias and avoid activating G protein-mediated pathways that lead to inflammation. We compared CCR5-dependent activation of second messenger pathways in a single cell line. We studied two endogenous chemokines [RANTES (also known as CCL5) and MIP-1α (also known as CCL3)] and four chemokine analogs of RANTES (5P12-, 5P14-, 6P4-, and PSC-RANTES). We found that CCR5 signaled through both G i/o and G q/11 IP 1 accumulation and Ca 2+ flux arose from G q/11 activation, rather than from Gβγ subunit release after G i/o activation as had been previously proposed. The 6P4- and PSC-RANTES analogs were superagonists for G q/11 activation, whereas the 5P12- and 5P14-RANTES analogs displayed a signaling bias for G i/o These results demonstrate that RANTES analogs elicit G protein subtype-specific signaling bias and can cause CCR5 to couple preferentially to G q/11 rather than to G i/o signaling pathways. We propose that G protein subtype-specific signaling bias may be a general feature of GPCRs that can couple to more than one G protein family.

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