The interleukin-3 receptor (CD123) is a molecule found on cells which helps transmit the signal of interleukin-3, a soluble cytokine important in the immune system.
The gene for the alpha subunit is 40 kilobases long and has 12 exons.
Cell types and function
The receptor, found on pluripotent progenitor cells, induces tyrosinephosphorylation within the cell and promotes proliferation and differentiation within the hematopoietic cell lines. It can be found on basophils and pDCs as well as some cDCs among peripheral blood mononuclear cells.
Tagraxofusp, human IL-3 fused to diphtheria toxin, is an approved treatment for BPDCN.
An experimental antibody-drug conjugate SGN-CD123A targets CD123 as a possible treatment for AML.[1]