Interferon-alpha/beta receptor

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interferon (alpha, beta and omega) receptor 1
Identifiers
Symbol IFNAR1
Alt. symbols IFNAR
Entrez 3454
HUGO 5432
OMIM 107450
RefSeq NM_000629
UniProt P17181
Other data
Locus Chr. 21 q22.1
interferon (alpha, beta and omega) receptor 2
File:Biochem Mol..png
NMR structure of the interferon-binding ectodomain of the human interferon receptor.[1]
Identifiers
Symbol IFNAR2
Alt. symbols IFNABR
Entrez 3455
HUGO 5433
OMIM 602376
RefSeq NM_207585
UniProt P48551
Other data
Locus Chr. 21 q22.1

The interferon-α/β receptor (IFNAR) is a receptor which binds type I interferons including interferon-α and -β. It is a heteromeric cell surface receptor composed of one chain with two subunits referred to as IFNAR1 and IFNAR2.[2] Upon binding of type I IFNs, IFNAR activates the JAK-STAT signaling pathway. Interferon stimulation classically results in an anti-viral immune response.

Structure

The structure was obtained using NMR. Originally 35 conformers were calculated. This was narrowed to 22 with low energy being the criteria. It was the first helical cytokine receptor's structure to be determined in solution. The molecule has one polymer The structure reveals the nature of binding. A model of the IFNAR2 reveals a predominantly hydrophobic patch on the receptor that interacts with a matching hydrophobic surface on IFN-alpha. An adjacent motif of charged side chains then guides the proteins into a tight complex. The binding interface may account for crossreactivity and ligand specificity of the receptor. The source for experiments was human but was expressed in Escherichia coli.

SCOP Classification

IFNAR is clustered into the group beta proteins based on its secondary structural content. IFNAR's folds show a clear evolutionary relationship to the Immunoglobulin beta-sandwich. It is grouped into the superfamily and family Fibronectin type III based on structural and functional similarities that show probable common evolution. The domain, or evolutionary unit observed in nature, is the Interferon-alpha/beta receptor beta chain. Species was human.

References

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External links

  1. PDB: 1n6u​; Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  2. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.