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E-selectin ligand complexes adopt an extended high-affinity conformation
Roland C. Preston1, Roman P. Jakob2, Florian P.C. Binder1, Christoph P. Sager1, Beat Ernst1,*, and Timm Maier2,*
1Institute of Molecular Pharmacy, Universität Basel, 4056 Basel, Switzerland
2Biozentrum, Universität Basel, 4056 Basel, Switzerland *Correspondence to:Timm Maier, E-mail: timm.maier{at}unibas.ch; Beat Ernst, E-mail: beat.ernst{at}unibas.ch
J Mol Cell Biol, Volume 8, Issue 1, February 2016, 62-72,  https://doi.org/10.1093/jmcb/mjv046
Keyword: inflammation, leukocyte adhesion, E-selectin, glycomimetic antagonist, sialyl Lewisx, conformational change

E-selectin is a cell-adhesion molecule of the vascular endothelium that promotes essential leukocyte rolling in the early inflammatory response by binding to glycoproteins containing the tetrasaccharide sialyl Lewisx (sLex). Efficient leukocyte recruitment under vascular flow conditions depends on an increased lifetime of E-selectin/ligand complexes under tensile force in a so-called catch-bond binding mode. Co-crystal structures of a representative fragment of the extracellular E-selectin region with sLex and a glycomimetic antagonist thereof reveal an extended E-selectin conformation, which is identified as a high-affinity binding state of E-selectin by molecular dynamics simulations. Small-angle X-ray scattering experiments demonstrate a direct link between ligand binding and E-selectin conformational transition under static conditions in solution. This permits tracing a series of concerted structural changes connecting ligand binding to conformational stretching as the structural basis of E-selectin catch-bond-mediated leukocyte recruitment. The detailed molecular view of the binding site paves the way for the design of a new generation of selectin antagonists. This is of special interest, since their therapeutic potential was recently demonstrated with the pan-selectin antagonists GMI-1070 (Rivipansel).