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Chemokines form complex signals during inflammation and disease that can be decoded by extracellular matrix proteoglycans

Amanda J. L. Ridley, Yaqing Ou, Richard Karlsson, Nabina Pun, Holly L. Birchenough, Iashia Z. Mulholland, Mary L. Birch, Andrew S. MacDonald, Thomas A. Jowitt, Craig Lawless, Rebecca L. Miller, Douglas P. Dyer

2023Science Signaling30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Chemokine-driven leukocyte recruitment is a key component of the immune response and of various diseases. Therapeutically targeting the chemokine system in inflammatory disease has been unsuccessful, which has been attributed to redundancy. We investigated why chemokines instead have specific, specialized functions, as demonstrated by multiple studies. We analyzed the expression of genes encoding chemokines and their receptors across species, tissues, and diseases. This analysis revealed complex expression patterns such that genes encoding multiple chemokines that mediated recruitment of the same leukocyte type were expressed in the same context, such as the genes encoding the CXCR3 ligands CXCL9, CXCL10, and CXCL11. Through biophysical approaches, we showed that these chemokines differentially interacted with extracellular matrix glycosaminoglycans (ECM GAGs), which was enhanced by sulfation of specific GAGs. Last, in vivo approaches demonstrated that GAG binding was critical for the CXCL9-dependent recruitment of specific T cell subsets but not of others, irrespective of CXCR3 expression. Our data demonstrate that interactions with ECM GAGs regulated whether chemokines were presented on cell surfaces or remained more soluble, thereby affecting chemokine availability and ensuring specificity of chemokine action. Our findings provide a mechanistic understanding of chemokine-mediated immune cell recruitment and identify strategies to target specific chemokines during inflammatory disease.

Topics & Concepts

ChemokineCXCL9CXCR3CCR1Cell biologyChemokine receptorBiologyCCL7CXCL10CCL13CCR3Extracellular matrixImmune systemCCL18CXCL14CXCL2CXCL16ImmunologyCX3CL1CCL21Chemokine receptors and signalingT-cell and B-cell ImmunologyGlycosylation and Glycoproteins Research
Chemokines form complex signals during inflammation and disease that can be decoded by extracellular matrix proteoglycans | Litcius