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research article

Enhancing the Signaling of GPCRs via Orthosteric Ions

Chan, H. C. Stephen
•
Xu, Yueming
•
Tan, Liang
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February 26, 2020
Acs Central Science

G protein-coupled receptors play essential roles in cellular processes such as neuronal signaling, vision, olfaction, tasting, and metabolism. As GPCRs are the most important drug targets, understanding their interactions with ligands is of utmost importance for discovering related new medicines. In many GPCRs, an allosteric sodium ion next to the highly conserved residue D-2.50 has been proposed to stabilize the inactive receptor state by mediating interactions between transmembrane helices. Here, we probed the existence of internal and functionally important sodium ions in the dopamine D2 receptor, using molecular dynamics simulations. Besides a new sodium ion at the allosteric ligand binding site, we discovered an additional sodium ion, located close to the orthosteric ligand binding site. Through cell-based activation assays, the signaling of D2 receptor with site-specific mutations was tested against a series of chemically modified agonists. We concluded an important structural role of this newly discovered orthosteric sodium ion in modulating the receptor signaling: It enables the coordination of a polar residue in the ligand binding site with an appropriately designed agonist molecule. An identical interaction was also observed in a recently released high-resolution crystal structure of mu-opioid receptor, which was reresolved in this work. Probably because of similar interactions, various metal ions have been found to increase the signaling of many other GPCRs. This unique principle and strategy could be used to optimize the drug activity of GPCR. Our findings open a new mechanistic opportunity of GPCR signaling and help design the next generation of drugs targeting GPCRs.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1021/acscentsci.9b01247
Web of Science ID

WOS:000517832800023

Author(s)
Chan, H. C. Stephen
•
Xu, Yueming
•
Tan, Liang
•
Vogel, Horst  
•
Cheng, Jianjun
•
Wu, Dong
•
Yuan, Shuguang
Date Issued

2020-02-26

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC

Published in
Acs Central Science
Volume

6

Issue

2

Start page

274

End page

282

Subjects

Chemistry, Multidisciplinary

•

Chemistry

•

dopamine-receptors

•

allosteric sodium

•

opioid receptors

•

structural basis

•

binding-sites

•

force-field

•

metal-ions

•

protein

•

d2

•

activation

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
LCPPM  
Available on Infoscience
March 18, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/167369
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