Binding of the antagonist caffeine to the human adenosine receptor hA2AR in nearly physiological conditions

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Abstract

Lipid composition may significantly affect membrane proteins function, yet its impact on the protein structural determinants is not well understood. Here we present a comparative molecular dynamics (MD) study of the human adenosine receptor type 2A (hA2AR) in complex with caffeine - a system of high neuro-pharmacological relevance - within different membrane types. These are POPC, mixed POPC/POPE and cholesterol-rich membranes. 0.8-μs MD simulations unambiguously show that the helical folding of the amphipathic helix 8 depends on membrane contents. Most importantly, the distinct cholesterol binding into the cleft between helix 1 and 2 stabilizes a specific caffeine-binding pose against others visited during the simulation. Hence, cholesterol presence (∼33%-50% in synaptic membrane in central nervous system), often neglected in X-ray determination of membrane proteins, affects the population of the ligand binding poses. We conclude that including a correct description of neuronal membranes may be very important for computer-aided design of ligands targeting hA2AR and possibly other GPCRs.

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Cao, R., Rossetti, G., Bauer, A., & CarIoni, P. (2015). Binding of the antagonist caffeine to the human adenosine receptor hA2AR in nearly physiological conditions. PLoS ONE, 10(5). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0126833

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