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Journal of Biological Chemistry 2019-Dec

Cross-kingdom mimicry of the receptor signaling and leukocyte recruitment activity of a human cytokine by its plant orthologs.

يمكن للمستخدمين المسجلين فقط ترجمة المقالات
الدخول التسجيل فى الموقع
يتم حفظ الارتباط في الحافظة
Dzmitry Sinitski
Katrin Gruner
Markus Brandhofer
Christos Kontos
Pascal Winkler
Anja Reinstädler
Priscila Bourilhon
Zhangping Xiao
Robbert Cool
Aphrodite Kapurniotu

الكلمات الدالة

نبذة مختصرة

Human macrophage migration-inhibitory factor (MIF) is an evolutionarily conserved protein that has both extracellular immune-modulating and intracellular cell-regulatory functions. MIF plays a role in various diseases including inflammatory diseases, atherosclerosis, autoimmunity, and cancer. It serves as an inflamma--tory cytokine and chemokine, but also exhibits enzymatic activity. Secreted MIF binds to cell-surface immune recep-tors such as CD74 and CXCR4. Plants possess MIF orthologs but lack the associated receptors, suggesting functional diversification across kingdoms. Here we characterized three MIF orthologs (termed MIF/D-DT-like proteins or MDLs) of the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana. Recombinant Arabidopsis MDLs (AtMDLs) share similar secondary structurecharacteristics with human MIF, yet only have minimal residual tautomerase activity using either p-hydroxyphenylpyruvate or dopachrome methyl ester as substrate. Site-specific mutagenesis suggests that this is due to a distinct amino acid difference at catalytic cavity-defining residue Asn-98. Surprisingly, AtMDLs bind to the human MIF receptors CD74 and CXCR4. Moreover, they activate CXCR4-dependent signaling in a receptor-specific yeast reporter system and in CXCR4-expressing human HEK293 trans-fectants. Notably, plant MDLs exert dose-dependent chemotactic activity towards human monocytes and T cells. A small molecule MIF inhibitor and an allosteric CXCR4 inhibitor counteract this function, revealing its specificity. Our results indicate cross-kingdom conservation of the receptor signaling and leukocyte recruitment capacities of human MIF by plant orthologs. This may point towards a previously unrecognized interplay between plant proteins and the human innate immune system.

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