Abstract

Tick chemokine-binding proteins (evasins) are an emerging class of biologicals that target multiple chemokines and show anti-inflammatory activities in preclinical disease models. Using yeast surface display, we identified a CCL8-binding evasin, P672, from the tick Rhipicephalus pulchellus. We found that P672 binds CCL8 and eight other CC-class chemokines with a Kd < 10 nm and four other CC chemokines with a Kd between 10 and 100 nm and neutralizes CCL3, CCL3L1, and CCL8 with an IC50 < 10 nm. The CC chemokine–binding profile was distinct from that of evasin 1 (EVA1), which does not bind CCL8. We also show that P672's binding activity can be markedly modulated by the location of a StrepII-His purification tag. Combining native MS and bottom-up proteomics, we further demonstrated that P672 is glycosylated and forms a 1:1 complex with CCL8, disrupting CCL8 homodimerization. Homology modeling of P672 using the crystal structure of the EVA1 and CCL3 complex as template suggested that 44 N-terminal residues of P672 form most of the contacts with CCL8. Replacing the 29 N-terminal residues of EVA1 with the 44 N-terminal residues of P672 enabled this hybrid evasin to bind and neutralize CCL8, indicating that the CCL8-binding properties of P672 reside, in part, in its N-terminal residues. This study shows that the function of certain tick evasins can be manipulated simply by adding a tag. We conclude that homology modeling helps identify regions with transportable chemokine-binding functions within evasins, which can be used to construct hybrid evasins with altered properties.

Highlights

  • Tick chemokine-binding proteins are an emerging class of biologicals that target multiple chemokines and show anti-inflammatory activities in preclinical disease models

  • We have identified, using yeast surface display approach, a novel evasin-like protein, P672_RHIPU (P672) encoded in the salivary transcriptome of the tick R. pulchellus

  • In the yeast surface display experiment, we found that only a proportion of the clonal yeast population would bind CCL8

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Summary

Hybrid evasins

Binding results in a conformational change of the N terminus of CCL3, and this, together with the binding of the N-loop, explains the inhibition of chemokine activity [16]. In silico modeling and mutagenesis studies indicate that EVA4 targets the CCL3 N terminus [17]. Using molecular modeling we identified a CCL8-binding region in P672 that can be transplanted to EVA1, a protein that does not bind CCL8. These results show that tick CKBP function can be modulated in some cases by the addition of a tag, providing proof of the concept that regions within tick CCCKBPs with transportable properties can be identified and manipulated to create non-natural hybrid proteins with altered characteristics

Screening of a yeast surface display library
Discussion
Yeast surface display
Protein sequence analysis
CKBP production
Biolayer interferometry
Determination of glycosylation sites
Native mass spectrometry
Statistical analyses
Full Text
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