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Constitutive activity of an atypical chemokine receptor revealed by inverse agonistic nanobodies

Nature Communications. 2025-12; 
Claudia V Perez Almeria, Omolade Otun, Roman Schlimgen, Thomas D Lamme, Lotte Di Niro, Caitrin Crudden, Jan Paul Bebelman, Noureldine Youssef, Lejla Musli, Shawn Jenjak, Vladimir Bobkov, Julia Drube, Carsten Hoffmann, Brian F Volkman, Sébastien Granier, Cherine Bechara, Marco Siderius, Raimond Heukers, Christopher T Schafer, Martine J Smit Amsterdam Institute for Molecular and Life Sciences (AIMMS), Department of Chemistry & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Division of Medicinal Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Vrije Universiteit
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Abstract

Stimulation of atypical chemokine receptor 3 (ACKR3) by chemokines does not activate G proteins but recruits arrestin. It is a chemokine scavenger that indirectly influences responses by restricting the availability of CXCL12, an agonist shared with the canonical receptor CXCR4. ACKR3 is upregulated in numerous disorders. Due to limited insights in chemokine-activated ACKR3 signaling, it is unclear how ACKR3 contributes to pathological phenotypes. One explanation may be that constitutive activity of ACKR3 drives non-canonical signaling through a basal receptor state. Here we characterize the constitutive responses of ACKR3 using inverse agonistic nanobodies to suppress its basal activity. These tools promote an... More

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