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Mechanistic insights into molecular evolution of species-specific differential glycosaminoglycan binding surfaces in growth-related oncogene chemokines.

Chemokines are chemotactic cytokines involved in leucocyte trafficking to infected tissue. Growth-related oncogene (GRO) chemokines namely CXCL1, CXCL2 and CXCL3 are neutrophil activating chemokines sharing a conserved three-dimensional structure, but encompassing functional diversity due to gene duplication and evolutionary events. However, the evolutionary mechanisms including selection pressures involved in diversification of GRO genes have not yet been characterized. Here, we performed comprehensive evolutionary analysis of GRO genes among different mammalian species. Phylogenetic analysis illustrated a species-specific evolution pattern. Selection analysis evidenced that these genes have undergone concerted evolution. Seventeen positively selected sites were obtained, although the majority of the protein is under purifying selection. Interestingly, these positively selected sites are more concentrated on the C-terminal/glycosaminoglycan (GAG) binding and dimerization segment compared to receptor binding domain. Substitution rate analysis confirmed the C-terminal domain of GRO genes as the highest substituted segment. Further, structural analysis established that the nucleotide alterations in the GAG binding domain are the source of surface charge modulation, thus generating the differential GAG binding surfaces and multiple binding sites as per evolutionary pressure, although the helical surface is primordial for GAG binding. Indeed, such variable electrostatic surfaces are crucial to regulate chemokine gradient formation during a host's defence against pathogens and also explain the significance of chemokine promiscuity.

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