Loading
PDBj
MenuPDBj@FacebookPDBj@TwitterPDBj@YouTubewwPDB FoundationwwPDB
RCSB PDBPDBeBMRBAdv. SearchSearch help

1IL8

THREE-DIMENSIONAL STRUCTURE OF INTERLEUKIN 8 IN SOLUTION

Summary for 1IL8
Entry DOI10.2210/pdb1il8/pdb
DescriptorINTERLEUKIN-8 (1 entity in total)
Functional Keywordscytokine
Biological sourceHomo sapiens (human)
Cellular locationSecreted: P10145
Total number of polymer chains2
Total formula weight16803.61
Authors
Clore, G.M.,Gronenborn, A.M. (deposition date: 1990-03-08, release date: 1991-01-15, Last modification date: 2024-11-06)
Primary citationClore, G.M.,Appella, E.,Yamada, M.,Matsushima, K.,Gronenborn, A.M.
Three-dimensional structure of interleukin 8 in solution.
Biochemistry, 29:1689-1696, 1990
Cited by
PubMed Abstract: The solution structure of the interleukin 8 (IL-8) dimer has been solved by nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectroscopy and hybrid distance geometry-dynamical simulated annealing calculations. The structure determination is based on a total of 1880 experimental distance restraints (of which 82 are intersubunit) and 362 torsion angle restraints (comprising phi, psi, and chi 1 torsion angles). A total of 30 simulated annealing structures were calculated, and the atomic rms distribution about the mean coordinate positions (excluding residues 1-5 of each subunit) is 0.41 +/- 0.08 A for the backbone atoms and 0.90 +/- 0.08 A for all atoms. The three-dimensional solution structure of the IL-8 dimer reveals a structural motif in which two symmetry-related antiparallel alpha-helices, approximately 24 A long and separated by about 14 A, lie on top of a six-stranded antiparallel beta-sheet platform derived from two three-stranded Greek keys, one from each monomer unit. The general architecture is similar to that of the alpha 1/alpha 2 domains of the human class I histocompatibility antigen HLA-A2. It is suggested that the two alpha-helices form the binding site for the cellular receptor and that the specificity of IL-8, as well as that of a number of related proteins involved in cell-specific chemotaxis, mediation of cell growth, and the inflammatory response, is achieved by the distinct distribution of charged and polar residues at the surface of the helices.
PubMed: 2184886
DOI: 10.1021/bi00459a004
PDB entries with the same primary citation
Experimental method
SOLUTION NMR
Structure validation

227111

数据于2024-11-06公开中

PDB statisticsPDBj update infoContact PDBjnumon