Tj. Kunicki et al., MOLECULAR DETERMINANTS OF ARG-GLY-ASP LIGAND SPECIFICITY FOR BETA(3) INTEGRINS, The Journal of biological chemistry, 272(7), 1997, pp. 4103-4107
The Arg-Tyr-Asp (RYD) and Arg-Gly-Asp (RGD) sequences within the third
complementarity-determining region of the heavy chain (H3) of murine
recombinant Feb molecules OPG2 and AP7, respectively, are responsible
for their specific binding to the platelet integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3).
In this study, we evaluated the influence of divalent cation composit
ion and single amino acid substitutions at key positions within H3 on
the selectivity of these Fab molecules for integrin alpha(IIb)beta(3)
versus the vitronectin receptor alpha(v) beta(3). The parent Fab molec
ule OPG2 (H3 sequence, HPFYRYDGGN) binds selectively to alpha(IIb)beta
(3) and not at all to any other RGD-cognitive integrin, particularly a
lpha(IIb)beta(3), under any divalent cation conditions. The binding of
the AP7 Fab molecule (HPFYRGDGGN) to alpha(IIb)beta(3) is not affecte
d by the relative composition of calcium, magnesium or manganese. Howe
ver, AP7 binding to alpha(v) beta(3), either expressed by M21 cells or
as the purified integrin, is supported by manganese and inhibited by
calcium. If the flanking asparagine 108 residue within the AP7 H3 loop
is replaced by alanine (HPFYRGDGGA), the resulting Fab molecule AP7.4
binds selectively to alpha(v) beta(3) in a cation-dependent manner, b
ut does not bind at all to alpha(IIb)beta(3) under any conditions. AP7
.4 binding to alpha(IIb)beta(3) is supported by manganese, completely
inhibited by calcium, and largely unaffected by magnesium. This behavi
or mimics that of the adhesive protein, osteopontin, another ligand th
at binds preferentially to alpha(v) beta(3). Despite these differences
in specificity for alpha(IIb)beta(3) and alpha(v) beta(3), AP7 and AP
7.4 remain selective for the beta(3) integrins and do not bind to cell
lines that express the RGD-cognitive integrins alpha(v) beta(5) or al
pha(5) beta(1). These results confirm that subtle changes in the amino
acid composition immediately flanking the RGD or RYD moths can have a
profound effect on beta(3) integrin specificity, most likely because
they influence the juxtaposition of the arginine and aspartate side ch
ains within the extended RGD loop sequence.