Structural Mimicry in Class A G Protein-coupled Receptor Rotamer Toggle Switches

  • McAllister S
  • Hurst D
  • Barnett-Norris J
  • et al.
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Abstract

In this study, we tested the hypothesis that a CB1 TMH3-4-5-6 aromatic microdomain, which includes F3.25(190), F3.36(201), W5.43(280), and W6.48(357), is centrally involved in CB1 receptor activation, with the F3.36(201)/W6.48(357) interaction key to the maintenance of the CB 1-inactive state. We have shown previously that when F3.36(201), W5.43(280), and W6.48(357) are individually mutated to alanine, a significant reduction in ligand binding affinity is observed in the presence of WIN 55,212-2 and SR141716A but not CP55,940 and anandamide. In the work presented here, we report a detailed functional analysis of the F3.36(201)A, F3.25(190)A, W5.43(280)A, and W6.48(357)A mutant receptors in stable cell lines created in HEK cells for agonist-stimulated guanosine 5′-3-O-(thio)triphosphate (GTPγS) binding and GIRK1/4 channel current effects in Xenopus oocytes where the mutant proteins were expressed transiently. The F3.36(201)A mutation showed statistically significant increases in ligand-independent stimulation of GTPγS binding versus wild type CB1, although basal levels for the W6.48(357)A mutant were not statistically different from wild type CB 1. F3.36(201)A demonstrated a limited activation profile in the presence of multiple agonists. In contrast, enhanced agonist activation was produced by W6.48(357)A. These results suggest that a F3.36(201)/W6.48(357)- specific contact is an important constraint for the CB1-inactive state that may need to break during activation. Modeling studies suggest that the F3.36(201)/W6.48(357) contact can exist in the inactive state of CB 1 and be broken in the activated state via a χ1 rotamer switch (F3.36(201) trans, W6.48(357) g+) → (F3.36(201) g+, W6.48(357) trans). The F3.36(201)/W6.48(357) interaction therefore may represent a "toggle switch" for activation of CB1.

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McAllister, S. D., Hurst, D. P., Barnett-Norris, J., Lynch, D., Reggio, P. H., & Abood, M. E. (2004). Structural Mimicry in Class A G Protein-coupled Receptor Rotamer Toggle Switches. Journal of Biological Chemistry, 279(46), 48024–48037. https://doi.org/10.1074/jbc.m406648200

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