“…There is little cross-reactivity between hormones and receptors of different species or different types, unless (1) both are highly homologous (Fukunaga et al, 1991;Nicola & Metcalf, 1991), or (2) the hormones share a common receptor component (Boulay & Paul, 1992;Kondo et al, 1993;Russell et al, 1993), or (3) have different binding sites on the hormone (Fuh et al, 1993). An indication that a part of the specificity of hormone-receptor recognition may be dependent on electrostatic interactions is given by observations that mutations involving charged residues in 1L-2 (Weigel et al, 1989;Zurawski et al, 1990;Zurawski & Zurawski, 1992), IL-4 (Kruse et al, 1992Ramanathan et al, 1993;Wlodaweret al, 1993), GM-CSF(Kaushanskyetal., 1989;Lopez et al, 1992), and hGH (Cunningham et al, 1991;Cunningham & Wells, 1993;Wells & de Vos, 1993) and its receptor (Bass et al, 1991) often have a significant effect on receptor binding. We have therefore carried out a comparative study of the electrostatic properties of 5 growth factors, the extracellular part of the hGH receptor, and a homology-modeled extracellular part of the 130-kDa chain (IL-4R) of the IL-4 receptor in order to examine their binding modes.…”