4.7 Review

New paradigms in chemokine receptor signal transduction: Moving beyond the two-site model

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 114, Issue -, Pages 53-68

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bcp.2016.04.007

Keywords

Seven transmembrane-spanning receptor (7TMR); Two-site model; Chemokine stoichiometry; 7TMR activation; Biased agonism

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health (NIH) grant [F30CA196040-01A1, R01AI058072, K99GM115814]
  2. Luxembourg Institute of Health (LIH) [MESR 20100708, 20150415]
  3. Fonds National de la Recherche (FNR) Luxembourg grant AFR CX-CRP-7 [3004509]
  4. Fonds National de la Recherche (FNR) Luxembourg grant AFR CX-CRP-4 [5907281]
  5. INTER Nanokine [10358798]
  6. F.R.S.-FNRS-Televie grant CX-CRP-3 [7456814]
  7. F.R.S.-FNRS-Televie grant CX-CRP-73 [7461515]

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Chemokine receptor (CKR) signaling forms the basis of essential immune cellular functions, and dysregulated CKR signaling underpins numerous disease processes of the immune system and beyond. CKRs, which belong to the seven transmembrane domain receptor (7TMR) superfamily, initiate signaling upon binding of endogenous, secreted chemokine ligands. Chemokine-CKR interactions are traditionally described by a two-step/two-site mechanism, in which the CKR N-terminus recognizes the chemokine globular core (i.e. site 1 interaction), followed by activation when the unstructured chemokine N-terminus is inserted into the receptor TM bundle (i.e. site 2 interaction). Several recent studies challenge the structural independence of sites 1 and 2 by demonstrating physical and allosteric links between these supposedly separate sites. Others contest the functional independence of these sites, identifying nuanced roles for site 1 and other interactions in CKR activation. These developments emerge within a rapidly changing landscape in which CKR signaling is influenced by receptor PTMs, chemokine and CKR dimerization, and endogenous non-chemokine ligands. Simultaneous advances in the structural and functional characterization of 7TMR biased signaling have altered how we understand promiscuous chemokine-CKR interactions. In this review, we explore new paradigms in CKR signal transduction by considering studies that depict a more intricate architecture governing the consequences of chemokine-CKR interactions. Published by Elsevier Inc.

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