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Strategies for positioning fluorescent probes and crosslinkers on formyl peptide ligands
Vilven J.C.3; Domalewski M.3; Prossnitz E.R.4; Ye R.D.4; Muthukumaraswamy N.1; Harris R.B.1; Freer R.J.1; Sklar L.A.3
1998
Source PublicationJournal of Receptor and Signal Transduction Research
ISSN10799893
Volume18Issue:2-3Pages:187-221
Abstract

Chemoattractant receptors represent a major subset or the G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) family. One of the best characterized, the N-formyl peptide receptor (FPR), participates in host defense responses of neutrophils. The features of the ligand which regulate its interaction with the FPR are well-known. By manipulating these features we have developed new ligands to probe structural and mechanistic aspects of the peptide-receptor interaction. Three ligand groups have been developed: 1) ligands containing a Lys residue located in positions 2 through 7 that can be conjugated to FITC (N-formyl-Met1-Lys2-Phe3-Phe4, N-formyl-Met1-Leu2-Lys3-Phe4, N-formyl-Met1- Leu2-Phe3-Lys4, N-formyl-Met1-Leu2-Phe3-Phe4-Lys5, N-formyl-nLeu1-Leu2-Phe3- nLeu4-Tyr5-Lys6 and N-formyl-Met1-Leu2-Phe3-Phe4-Gly5-Gly6-Lys7; 2) fluorescent pentapeptide ligands (N-formyl-Met-X-Phe-Phe-Lys(FITC) where X = Leu, Ala, Val or Gly); and 3) small crosslinking ligands where the photoaffinity crosslinker 4-azidosalicylic acid (ASA) was conjugated to Lys in positions 3 and 4 and p-benzoyl-phenylalanine (Bpa) was located in position 2 in N-formyl-Met1-Bpa2-Phe3-Tyr4. The peptides were characterized according to activity and affinity in human neutrophils and cell lines transfected with FPR. All of the peptides were agonists, with parallel affinity and activity. In the first group, the peptide activity decreases as Lys is placed closer to the N-formyl group and the activity is improved by 1- 3 orders of magnitude by conjugation with FITC. In the second group, the dissociation rate of the peptide from the receptor increases as position 2 is replaced by aliphatic amino acids with smaller alkyl groups. In the third group, crosslinking ligands remain biologically active, display nM affinity and covalently label the FPR.

DOI10.3109/10799899809047744
URLView the original
Language英語English
WOS IDWOS:000074384100006
Scopus ID2-s2.0-0031808332
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Citation statistics
Document TypeJournal article
CollectionUniversity of Macau
Affiliation1.Commonwealth Biotechnology
2.Los Alamos National Laboratory
3.University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center
4.Scripps Research Institute
Recommended Citation
GB/T 7714
Vilven J.C.,Domalewski M.,Prossnitz E.R.,et al. Strategies for positioning fluorescent probes and crosslinkers on formyl peptide ligands[J]. Journal of Receptor and Signal Transduction Research, 1998, 18(2-3), 187-221.
APA Vilven J.C.., Domalewski M.., Prossnitz E.R.., Ye R.D.., Muthukumaraswamy N.., Harris R.B.., Freer R.J.., & Sklar L.A. (1998). Strategies for positioning fluorescent probes and crosslinkers on formyl peptide ligands. Journal of Receptor and Signal Transduction Research, 18(2-3), 187-221.
MLA Vilven J.C.,et al."Strategies for positioning fluorescent probes and crosslinkers on formyl peptide ligands".Journal of Receptor and Signal Transduction Research 18.2-3(1998):187-221.
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