Protein Domain : IPR000174

Type:  Family Name:  CXC chemokine receptor 1/2
Description:  Chemokines (chemotactic cytokines) are a family of chemoattractant molecules. They attract leukocytes to areas of inflammation and lesions, and play a key role in leukocyte activation. Originally defined as host defense proteins, chemokines are now known to play a much broader biological role []. They have a wide range of effects in many different cell types beyond the immune system, including, for example, various cells of the central nervous system [], and endothelial cells, where they may act as either angiogenic or angiostatic factors [].The chemokine family is divided into four classes based on the number and spacing of their conserved cysteines: 2 Cys residues may be adjacent (the CC family); separated by an intervening residue (the CXC family); have only one of the first two Cys residues (C chemokines); or contain both cysteines, separated by three intervening residues (CX3C chemokines).Chemokines exert their effects by binding to rhodopsin-like G protein-coupled receptors on the surface of cells. Following interaction with their specific chemokine ligands, chemokine receptors trigger a flux in intracellular calcium ions, which cause a cellular response, including the onset of chemotaxis. There are over fifty distinct chemokines and least 18 human chemokine receptors []. Although the receptors bind only a single class of chemokines, they often bind several members of the same class with high affinity. Chemokine receptors are preferentially expressed on important functional subsets of dendritic cells, monocytes and lymphocytes, including Langerhans cells and T helper cells [, ]. Chemokines and their receptors can also be subclassified into homeostatic leukocyte homing molecules (CXCR4, CXCR5, CCR7, CCR9) versus inflammatory/inducible molecules (CXCR1, CXCR2, CXCR3, CCR1-6, CX3CR1).The CXC chemokine receptors are a subfamily of chemokine receptors that specifically bind and respond to cytokines of the CXC chemokine family. There are currently seven known CXC chemokine receptors in mammals, CXCR1 through to CXCR7.CXCR1 and CXCR2, also known as interleukin 8 receptor alpha and beta, respectively [], are closely-related receptors. They act as specific receptors for the CXCL8 and CXCL6 chemokines, which have a glutamate-leucine-arginine (ELR) motif in their N-terminal domains []. CXCR2 also binds additional ELR motif-containing CXC chemokines (such as CXCL1, CXCL2, CXCL3, CXCL5 and CXCL7) with high affinity [].CXCR1 and CXCR2 are expressed on all granulocytes, monocytes, and mast cells and on some CD8+ T-cells and CD56+ natural killer (NK) cells []. Equal amounts of CXCR1 and CXCR2 are present on neutrophils [, , , , ], but it appears that monocytes and positive lymphocytes express more CXCR2 than CXCR1 [].This entry represents both CXCR1 and CXCR2. Short Name:  Chemokine_CXCR_1/2

2 Child Features

DB identifier Type Name
IPR001355 Family CXC chemokine receptor 1
IPR000057 Family CXC chemokine receptor 2

0 Contains

1 Cross References

Identifier
PR00427

0 Found In

4 GO Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0016494 IPR000174
GO:0006935 IPR000174
GO:0007186 IPR000174
GO:0016021 IPR000174

4 Ontology Annotations

GO Term Gene Name
GO:0016494 IPR000174
GO:0006935 IPR000174
GO:0007186 IPR000174
GO:0016021 IPR000174

1 Parent Features

DB identifier Type Name
IPR000355 Family Chemokine receptor family

0 Proteins

14 Publications

First Author Title Year Journal Volume Pages PubMed ID
            11544102
            10714678
            8955112
            10601351
            9500790
            8384312
            1379593
            10878382
            12239185
            15967374
            7527448
            9689100
            7592998
            16720046