Abstract

A number of secreted cytokines, such as interleukin-6 (IL-6), are attractive targets for the treatment of inflammatory diseases. We have determined the solution structure of mouse IL-6 to assess the functional significance of apparent differences in the receptor interaction sites (IL-6Rα and gp130) suggested by the fairly low degree of sequence similarity with human IL-6. Structure-based sequence alignment of mouse IL-6 and human IL-6 revealed surprising differences in the conservation of the two distinct gp130 binding sites (IIa and IIIa), which suggests a primacy for site III-mediated interactions in driving initial assembly of the IL-6/IL-6Rα/gp130 ternary complex. This is further supported by a series of direct binding experiments, which clearly demonstrate a high affinity IL-6/IL-6Rα-gp130 interaction via site III but only weak binding via site II. Collectively, our findings suggest a pathway for the evolution of the hexameric, IL-6/IL-6Rα/gp130 signaling complex and strategies for therapeutic targeting. We propose that the signaling complex originally involved specific interactions between IL-6 and IL-6Rα (site I) and between the D1 domain of gp130 and IL-6/IL-6Rα (site III), with the later inclusion of interactions between the D2 and D3 domains of gp130 and IL-6/IL-6Rα (site II) through serendipity. It seems likely that IL-6 signaling benefited from the evolution of a multipurpose, nonspecific protein interaction surface on gp130, now known as the cytokine binding homology region (site II contact surface), which fortuitously contributes to stabilization of the IL-6/IL-6Rα/gp130 signaling complex.

Highlights

  • Interleukin-6 signaling requires assembly of a ternary IL-6/IL-6R␣/gp130 complex

  • The region of gp130 involved in site IIa interactions is known as the cytokine homology region and forms the binding site for a diverse range of cytokines utilizing gp130 as their co-receptor including IL-6, IL-11, leukemia inhibitory factor (LIF), and ciliary neurotrophic factor (CNTF) (Fig. 5) [25, 27, 28]

  • There is an extensive contact surface between gp130 and IL-6R␣ at site IIb (1100 Å2), which appears to contribute the majority of the specificity and affinity of interactions at site

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Summary

Background

Interleukin-6 signaling requires assembly of a ternary IL-6/IL-6R␣/gp130 complex. Results: Determination of the mIL-6 structure allowed detailed structural and sequence comparisons with hIL-6, predicting the primacy of sites in driving IL-6/IL-6R␣-gp130 interactions, which was confirmed by binding experiments. Structure-based sequence alignment of mouse IL-6 and human IL-6 revealed surprising differences in the conservation of the two distinct gp130 binding sites (IIa and IIIa), which suggests a primacy for site III-mediated interactions in driving initial assembly of the IL-6/IL-6R␣/gp130 ternary complex. Obtained for mIL-6 confirmed its assignment as the ortholog of human IL-6 despite the low degree of sequence homology (40% identity), and structure-based sequence alignment allowed comparison of the IL-6R␣ and gp130 interaction sites on human and mouse IL-6 [6, 8, 9] This revealed surprising differences in the conservation of the two distinct gp130 binding sites (site IIa and site IIIa, Fig. 1), which suggests a greater importance for site III interactions in mediating initial ternary complex assembly. The work reported suggests a mechanism for the evolution of the hexameric signaling complex and highlights specific interaction sites for therapeutic targeting

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