Effects of Anchor Structure and Glycosylation of Fcγ Receptor III on Ligand Binding Affinity

Ning Jiang, Wei Chen, Prithiviraj Jothikumar, Jaina M Patel, Rangaiah Shashidharamurthy, Periasamy Selvaraj, Cheng Zhu, Shashidharamurthy Taval

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Isoforms of the Fcγ receptor III (FcγRIII or CD16) are cell surface receptors for the Fc portion of IgG and important regulators of humoral immune responses. Different ligand binding kinetics of FcγRIII isoforms are obtained in three dimensions by surface plasmon resonance and in two dimensions by a micropipette adhesion frequency assay. We show that the anchor structure of CD16 isoforms isolated from the cell membrane affects their binding affinities in a ligand-specific manner. Changing the receptor anchor structure from full to partial to none decreases the ligand binding affinity for human IgG1 (hIgG1) but increases it for murine IgG2a (mIgG2a). Removing N-glycosylation from the CD16 protein core by tunicamycin also increases the ligand binding affinity. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that deglycosylation at Asn-163 of CD16 removes the steric hindrance for the CD16-hIgG1 Fc binding and thus increases the binding affinity. These results highlight an unexpected sensitivity of ligand binding to the receptor anchor structure and glycosylation and suggest their respective roles in controlling allosterically the conformation of the ligand binding pocket of CD16.

Original languageAmerican English
JournalMolecular Biology of the Cell
Volume27
StatePublished - Nov 7 2016

Keywords

  • CD16 antigen
  • immunoglobulin G1
  • immunoglobulin G2a
  • tunicamycin
  • allosterism
  • article
  • binding affinity
  • cell adhesion
  • CHO cell line
  • controlled study
  • deglycosylation
  • erythrocyte
  • human
  • human cell
  • ligand binding
  • molecular dynamics
  • priority journal
  • protein conformation
  • protein glycosylation
  • protein structure
  • stereospecificity
  • surface plasmon resonance

Disciplines

  • Cell Biology
  • Medicine and Health Sciences

Cite this