Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UNIPROT:P10145 (
IL-8
)
23,849
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The
Duffy blood group antigen
has been postulated to be a receptor on red blood cells (RBCs) for the malarial parasite Plasmodium vivax and a promiscuous receptor for the chemokine superfamily of inflammatory proteins. Recently, the Duffy antigen glycoprotein D cDNA has been cloned (Chaudhuri et al: Proc Natl Acad Sci USA 90:10793, 1993). We have analyzed the binding properties of the cloned Duffy antigen. Duffy-antigen cDNAs expressed in human embryonic kidney cells produced cell-surface proteins that reacted with two known anti-Duffy monoclonal antibodies. Direct ligand binding and displacement experiments using recombinant chemokine proteins also show that the cloned Duffy protein is the RBC chemokine receptor. Radiolabeled chemokines of both the C-C (RANTES and MCP-1) and C-X-C (
IL-8
and MGSA/gro) subclasses bound reversibly to transfected cells with dissociation constants in the nanomolar range. Chemokines of either class displaced heterologous chemokines, indicating that they were competing for a single site on the transfected cells. Although the chemokines bound to the transfected cells with high affinity, there was no evidence for signal transduction, as measured by transient increases in intracellular calcium ion concentration, through the Duffy antigen/RBC chemokine receptor in transfected cells. Lastly, we have performed a computer analysis on the amino acid structure of the Duffy antigen/RBC chemokine receptor. Although the cloned Duffy antigen has been postulated to be a nine-transmembrane-spanning receptor, our analysis suggests that the molecule most likely belongs to the seven-transmembrane-spanning receptor superfamily and is therefore similar to other chemokine receptors previously identified.
...
PMID:Functional and biochemical analysis of the cloned Duffy antigen: identity with the red blood cell chemokine receptor. 751 17
Plasmodium vivax and the related monkey malaria, P. knowlesi, require interaction with the
Duffy blood group antigen
, a receptor for a family of chemokines that includes
interleukin 8
, to invade human erythrocytes. One P. vivax and three P. knowlesi proteins that serve as erythrocyte binding ligands in such interactions share sequence homology. Expression of different regions of the P. vivax protein in COS7 cells identified a cysteine-rich domain that bound Duffy blood group-positive but not Duffy blood group-negative human erythrocytes. The homologous domain of the P. knowlesi proteins also bound erythrocytes, but had different specificities. The P. vivax and P. knowlesi binding domains lie in one of two regions of homology with the P. falciparum sialic acid binding protein, another erythrocyte binding ligand, indicating conservation of the domain for erythrocyte binding in evolutionarily distant malaria species. The binding domains of these malaria ligands represent potential vaccine candidates and targets for receptor-blockade therapy.
...
PMID:Identification of the erythrocyte binding domains of Plasmodium vivax and Plasmodium knowlesi proteins involved in erythrocyte invasion. 804 29
The human erythrocyte chemokine receptor has recently been shown to be identical to the
Duffy blood group antigen
and is expressed in multiple organs, including kidney. Here we have examined the molecular properties of the renal isoform. Immunoblot analysis of erythrocyte and kidney detergent lysates, with a monoclonal antibody (Fy6) to the Duffy antigen, revealed that the renal isoform had a molecular mass of 43-45 kD, which could be distinguished from that observed in erythroid cells (38-47 kD). Chemical cross-linking of kidney membranes to 125I-melanoma growth stimulatory activity (MGSA) indicated that the renal chemokine receptor had a molecular mass of 38-45 kD. Binding of 125I-labeled MGSA to kidney membranes was competitively inhibited by the addition of unlabeled MGSA,
IL-8
, regulated on activation, normal T expressed and secrted, and monocyte chemotactic protein-1. Scatchard analysis of MGSA binding showed that the chemokine receptor from renal tissues had a binding affinity of 3.5 nM similar to that observed for the erythroid isoform (5-10 nM). The primary structure of the renal chemokine receptor predicted from the nucleotide sequence of cDNA from renal tissues is identical to that reported for the erythroid isoform. Immunocytochemical staining of kidney with Fy6 localized expression to endothelial cells present in postcapillary venules. These studies implicate the Duffy antigen/chemokine receptor in the complex interactions between postcapillary endothelial cells and granulocytes, which are modulated by pro-inflammatory chemokines.
...
PMID:Postcapillary venule endothelial cells in kidney express a multispecific chemokine receptor that is structurally and functionally identical to the erythroid isoform, which is the Duffy blood group antigen. 808 83