Abstract

Human interleukin-5 (IL-5) cytokine mediates the development of eosinophils and is involved in a variety of immune inflammatory responses that play a major role in the pathogenesis of childhood asthma, leukemia, and other pediatric allergic diseases. The immunomodulatory cytokine functions by binding to its cognate cell surface receptor IL-5R in a sheet-by-sheet manner, which can be conformationally mimicked and competitively disrupted by a double-stranded cyclic AF18748 peptide. In this study, we systematically examined the co-crystallized complex structure of human IL-5R with AF18748 peptide and rationally designed a halogen bond to glue at the protein-peptide complex interface by substituting the indole moiety of AF18748 Trp13 residue with a halogen atom (X = F, Cl, Br, or I). High-level theoretical calculations imparted presence of the halogen bond between the oxygen atom (O) of IL-5R Glu58 backbone and the halogen atom (X) of AF18748 Trp13 side chain. Experimental assays confirmed that the halogen bond can promote peptide binding moderately or considerably. More importantly, the halogen bond not only enhances peptide affinity to IL-5R, but also improves peptide selectivity for its cognate IL-5R over other noncognate IL-R proteins. As might be expected, the affinity and selectivity conferred by halogen bond increase consistently in the order: H < F < Cl < Br < I. Structural modeling revealed that the halogen bond plus its vicinal π-cation-π stacking co-define a ringed noncovalent system at the complex interface, which involves a synergistic effect to effectively improve the peptide binding potency and recognition specificity.

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