Subramanian, Shyamsundar; Boder, Eric T.; Discher, Dennis E.
Phylogenetic divergence of CD47 interactions with human signal regulatory protein alpha reveals locus of species specificity - Implications for the binding site
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL CHEMISTRY, 282:1805-1818, JAN 19 2007

Cell-cell interactions between ubiquitously expressed integrin-associated protein (CD47) and its counterreceptor signal regulatory protein (SIRP alpha) on phagocytes regulate a wide range of adhesive signaling processes, including the inhibition of phagocytosis as documented in mice. We show that CD47-SIRP alpha binding interactions are different between mice and humans, and we exploit phylogenetic divergence to identify the species-specific binding locus on the immunoglobulin domain of human CD47. All of the studies are conducted in the physiological context of membrane protein display on Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells. Novel quantitative flow cytometry analyses with CD47-green fluorescent protein and soluble human SIRP alpha as a probe show that neither human CD47 nor SIRP alpha requires glycosylation for interaction. Human CD47-expressing CHO cells spread rapidly on SIRP alpha-coated glass surfaces, correlating well with the spreading of primary human T cells. In contrast, CHO cells expressing mouse CD47 spread minimally and show equally weak binding to soluble human SIRP alpha. Further phylogenetic analyses and multisite substitutions of the CD47 Ig domain show that human to cow mutation of a cluster of seven residues on adjacent strands near the middle of the domain decreases the association constant for human SIRP alpha to about one-third that of human CD47. Direct tests of cell-cell adhesion between human monocytes and CD47-displaying CHO cells affirm the species specificity as well as the importance of the newly identified binding locus in cell-cell interactions.

DOI:10.1074/jbc.M603923200

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