Phosphorylation barcodes direct biased chemokine signaling at CXCR3.

Publication Type Preprint
Authors Eiger D, Smith J, Shi T, Stepniewski T, Tsai C, Honeycutt C, Boldizsar N, Gardner J, Nicora C, Moghieb A, Kawakami K, Choi I, Zheng K, Warman A, Alagesan P, Knape N, Huang O, Silverman J, Smith R, Inoue A, Selent J, Jacobs J, Rajagopal S
Journal bioRxiv
Date Published 03/14/2023
ISSN 2692-8205
Abstract G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) biased agonism, the activation of some signaling pathways over others, is thought to largely be due to differential receptor phosphorylation, or "phosphorylation barcodes." At chemokine receptors, ligands act as "biased agonists" with complex signaling profiles, which contributes to the limited success in pharmacologically targeting these receptors. Here, mass spectrometry-based global phosphoproteomics revealed that CXCR3 chemokines generate different phosphorylation barcodes associated with differential transducer activation. Chemokine stimulation resulted in distinct changes throughout the kinome in global phosphoproteomic studies. Mutation of CXCR3 phosphosites altered β-arrestin conformation in cellular assays and was confirmed by molecular dynamics simulations. T cells expressing phosphorylation-deficient CXCR3 mutants resulted in agonist- and receptor-specific chemotactic profiles. Our results demonstrate that CXCR3 chemokines are non-redundant and act as biased agonists through differential encoding of phosphorylation barcodes and lead to distinct physiological processes.
DOI 10.1101/2023.03.14.532634
PubMed ID 36993369
PubMed Central ID PMC10055163
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