학술논문

Stabilization of the Activated αMβ2 Integrin by a Small Molecule Inhibits Leukocyte Migration and Recruitment.
Document Type
Article
Source
Biochemistry. 3/7/2006, Vol. 45 Issue 9, p2862-2871. 10p. 2 Diagrams, 4 Graphs.
Subject
*INTEGRINS
*ANTI-inflammatory agents
*PEPTIDES
*LEUCOCYTES
*AMINO acids
*LIGAND binding (Biochemistry)
*CHEMICAL libraries
Language
ISSN
0006-2960
Abstract
Integrins are potential targets for the development of antiinflammatory agents. Here we develop a novel high-throughput assay by allowing a chemical library to compete with phage display peptide binding and identify a novel small-molecule ligand to the leukocyte-specific αMβ2 integrin. The identified thioxothiazolidine-containing compound, IMB-10, had an unexpected activity in that it stabilized binding of αMβ2 to its endogenous ligands proMMP-9 and fibrinogen. Single amino acid substitutions in the activity-regulating C-terminal helix and the underlying region in the ligand-binding I domain of the integrin suppressed the effect of IMB-10. A computational model indicated that IMB-10 occupies a distinct cavity present only in the activated form of the integrin I domain. IMB-10 inhibited αMβ2-dependent migration in vitro and inflammation-induced neutrophil emigration in vivo. Stabilization of integrin-mediated adhesion by a small molecule is a novel means to inhibit cell migration and may have a utility in treatment of inflammatory diseases involving leukocyte recruitment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]