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Publication : Structural and functional analysis of Ccr1l1, a Rodentia-restricted eosinophil-selective chemokine receptor homologue.

First Author  Kline JM Year  2021
Journal  J Biol Chem Pages  100373
PubMed ID  33548230 Mgi Jnum  J:304824
Mgi Id  MGI:6513000 Doi  10.1016/j.jbc.2021.100373
Citation  Kline JM, et al. (2021) Structural and functional analysis of Ccr1l1, a Rodentia-restricted eosinophil-selective chemokine receptor homologue. J Biol Chem :100373
abstractText  Mouse Ccr1l1 (Ccr1-like 1) encodes an orphan G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) with highest homology to the inflammatory and highly promiscuous chemokine receptors Ccr1 and Ccr3 (70 and 50% amino acid identity, respectively). Ccr1l1 was first cloned in 1995, yet current knowledge of this putative chemokine receptor is limited to its gene organization and chromosomal localization. Here we report that Ccr1l1 is a Rodentia-specific gene selectively expressed in eosinophils. However, eosinophil phenotypes, development and responsiveness to chemokines were all normal in naive Ccr1l1 knockout mice. We demonstrate for the first time that recombinant Ccr1l1 is expressed on the plasma membrane of transfected cells and contains an extracellular N-terminus and an intracellular C-terminus, consistent with GPCR topology. Using receptor internalization, beta-arrestin recruitment, calcium flux and chemotaxis assays, we excluded all 37 available mouse chemokines, including Ccr1 ligands, and two viral chemokines as Ccr1l1 ligands, and demonstrated that mouse Ccr1, but not Ccr1l1, exhibits constitutive signaling activity. However, sequence analysis and structural modeling revealed that Ccr1l1 is well-equipped to act as a classical signaling GPCR, with N-terminal sulfotyrosines as the only signaling and chemokine-binding determinant absent in Ccr1l1. Hereof, we show that a sulfatable N-terminal Ccr1 Y(18) residue is essential for chemotaxis and calcium responses induced by Ccl3 and Ccl9/10 but substituting the corresponding Ccr1l1 F(19) residue with tyrosine failed to confer responsiveness to Ccr1 ligands. Although Ccr1l1 remains an extreme outlier in the chemokine receptor family, our study supports it might respond to unidentified mouse chemokine ligands in eosinophil-driven immune responses.
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