Abstract
Chemokine binding to glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) is recognised to be an important step in inflammation and other pathological disorders like tumor growth and metastasis. Although different ways and strategies to interfere with these interactions are being pursued, no major breakthrough in the development of glycan-targeting drugs has been reported so far. We have engineered CXCL8 towards a dominant-negative form of this chemokine (dnCXCL8) which was shown to be highly active in various inflammatory animal models due to its inability to bind/activate the cognate CXCL8 GPC receptors on neutrophils in combination with its significantly increased GAG-binding affinity [1]. For the development of GAG-targeting chemokine-based biopharmaceuticals, we have established a repertoire of methods which allow the quantification of protein-GAG interactions. Isothermal fluorescence titration (IFT), surface plasmon resonance (SPR), isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC), and a novel ELISA-like competition assay (ELICO) have been used to determine Kd and IC50 values for CXCL8 and dnCXCL8 interacting with heparin and heparan sulfate (HS), the proto-typical members of the GAG family. Although the different methods gave different absolute affinities for the four protein-ligand pairs, the relative increase in GAG-binding affinity of dnCXCL8 compared to the wild type chemokine was found by all methods. In combination, these biophysical methods allow to discriminate between unspecific and specific protein-GAG interactions.
Highlights
Composed of repeating disaccharide units with alternating uronic acid- or galactose- and hexamine- (D-glucosamine or D-galactosamine) building blocks, glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are linear polysaccharides varying in length and molecular weights ranging from 10 to 100 kDa [2,3]
Heparan sulfate (HS) differs from heparin by its overall lower sulfation degree, which leads to an arrangement of high-sulfated domains—responsible for protein binding—and unsulfated domains
The chemokine-glycosaminoglycan interaction has been recognized as a key step in various biological and pathological processes involving leukocyte migration and extravasation
Summary
Tanja Gerlza 1, Bianca Hecher 1, Dalibor Jeremic 2, Thomas Fuchs 2, Martha Gschwandtner 1, Angelika Falsone 2, Bernd Gesslbauer 1 and Andreas J.
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