Structure-based design of decoy chemokines as a way to explore the pharmacological potential of glycosaminoglycans

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Abstract

Glycosaminoglycans (GAGs) are a class of highly negatively charged, unbranched, O-linked polysaccharides that are involved in many diseases. Their role as a protein-binding matrix on cell surfaces has long been recognized, but therapeutic approaches to interfere with protein-GAG interactions have been limited due to the complex chemistry of GAGs, on one hand, and due to the lack of specific antibodies against GAGs, on the other hand. We have developed a protein engineering platform (the so-called CellJammer technology), which enables us to introduce higher GAG-binding affinity into wild-type GAG-binding proteins and to combine this with impaired biological, receptor-binding function. Chemokines are among the prototypic GAG-binding proteins and here we present selected results of our CellJammer technology applied to several of these proinflammatory proteins. An overview is given of our lead decoy protein, PA401, which is a CXCL8-based mutant protein with increased GAG-binding affinity and decreased CXCR1/2 binding and activation. Major results from our CCL2 and CCL5 programmes are also summarized and the potential for clinical application of these decoy proteins is presented. © 2012 The Authors. British Journal of Pharmacology © 2012 The British Pharmacological Society.

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Adage, T., Piccinini, A. M., Falsone, A., Trinker, M., Robinson, J., Gesslbauer, B., & Kungl, A. J. (2012). Structure-based design of decoy chemokines as a way to explore the pharmacological potential of glycosaminoglycans. British Journal of Pharmacology, 167(6), 1195–1205. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1476-5381.2012.02089.x

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