The high affinity interleukin-2 receptor is composed
of three cell surface subunits, IL-2Rα, IL-2Rβ,
and IL-2Rγ. Functional forms of the IL-2 receptor exist,
however, that enlist only two of the three subunits. On
activated T-cells, the α- and β-subunits combine
as a preformed heterodimer (the pseudo-high affinity receptor)
that serves to capture IL-2. On a subpopulation of natural
killer cells, the β- and γ-subunits interact in
a ligand-dependent manner to form the intermediate affinity
receptor site. Previously, we have demonstrated the feasibility
of employing coiled-coil molecular recognition for the
solution assembly of a heteromeric IL-2 receptor complex.
In that study, although the receptor was functional, the
coiled-coil complex was a trimer rather than the desired
heterodimer. We have now redesigned the hydrophobic heptad
sequences of the coiled-coils to generate soluble forms
of both the pseudo-high affinity and the intermediate affinity
heterodimeric IL-2 receptors. The properties of these complexes
were examined and their relevance to the physiological
IL-2 receptor mechanism is discussed.