An Intracellular Allosteric Site for a Specific Class of Antagonists of the CC Chemokine G Protein-Coupled Receptors CCR4 and CCR5

Chemokine CCL22 0301 basic medicine Receptors, CCR4 Molecular Structure Receptors, CCR5 Molecular Sequence Data CHO Cells Kidney Cell Line Inhibitory Concentration 50 03 medical and health sciences Cricetulus Chemokines, CC Cricetinae Data Interpretation, Statistical CCR5 Receptor Antagonists Animals Humans Amino Acid Sequence Calcium Signaling Chemokine CCL5 Allosteric Site
DOI: 10.1124/mol.107.039321 Publication Date: 2007-11-28T01:44:31Z
ABSTRACT
A novel mechanism for antagonism of the human chemokine receptors CCR4 and CCR5 has been discovered with a series of small-molecule compounds that seems to interact with an allosteric, intracellular site on the receptor. The existence of this site is supported by a series of observations: 1) intracellular access of these antagonists is required for their activity; 2) specific, saturable binding of a radiolabeled antagonist requires the presence of CCR4; and 3) through engineering receptor chimeras by reciprocal transfer of C-terminal domains between CCR4 and CCR5, compound binding and the selective structure-activity relationships for antagonism of these receptors seem to be associated with the integrity of that intracellular region. Published antagonists from other chemical series do not seem to bind to the novel site, and their interaction with either CCR4 or CCR5 is not affected by alteration of the C-terminal domain. The precise location of the proposed binding site remains to be determined, but the known close association of the C-terminal domain, including helix 8, as a proposed intracellular region that interacts with transduction proteins (e.g., G proteins and beta-arrestin) suggests that this could be a generic allosteric site for chemokine receptors and perhaps more broadly for class A G protein-coupled receptors. The existence of such a site that can be targeted for drug discovery has implications for screening assays for receptor antagonists, which would need, therefore, to consider compound properties for access to this intracellular site.
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