17
The structural basis for agonist and partial agonist action on a β 1 - adrenergic receptor Tony Warne, Rouslan Moukhametzianov, Jillian Baker, Rony Nehme, Patricia Edwards, Andrew Leslie, Gebhard Schertler, Christopher Tate Presented by Lucas Man

The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Presentation on a pub

Citation preview

Page 1: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

The structural basis for agonist and

partial agonist action on a β1-

adrenergic receptor

Tony Warne, Rouslan Moukhametzianov, Jillian Baker, Rony Nehme, Patricia Edwards, Andrew Leslie, GebhardSchertler, Christopher Tate

Presented by Lucas Man

Page 2: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

Introduction

• Adrenergic receptors and other G-protein-coupled receptors play important roles in biosignaling

▫ β1-adrenergic receptors in the heart

▫ Many drugs are synthetic ligands

• There is a range of ligand-binding effects; partial agonists

▫ The mechanism of this is not well understood

Page 3: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

Some biochemistry

• Protein receptors usually have 2 structurally different states:

▫ Inactive R state

▫ Active R* state

• R* state couples with G-protein, activates cascade

• At equilibrium

Source: NCBI

Page 4: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

Some biochemistry

• Standard conditions: R state preferred

• Agonist binding stabilizes R* state: R* state preferred

• Antagonists block agonists from binding

• Partial agonists?

▫ How are intermediate cellular responses produced?

Page 5: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

Hypothesis

• Receptors are either in R or R* state

▫ No evidence for intermediate state with reduced function

• Hypothesis:

▫ Partial agonists stabilize the R* state, but to a lesser extent than full agonists

▫ Equilibrium shifted towards R*, but to a lesser extent

Page 6: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

Methods

1. Receptor expression

2. Receptor purification and crystallization

3. X-ray crystallography and analysis

Picture sources: U of Miami, West Kentucky U

Page 7: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

1. Receptor expression

• Recombinant Baculovirus construct

▫ Gene for turkey thermostabilized β1 AR-m23 with His tag spliced in

• Infection of insect cells

• β1 AR-m23 produced in infected cells

Source: NCBI

Page 8: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

2. Receptor purification and

crystallization

• Centrifuge cells to separate proteins

• Use Immobilized Metal Ion Affinity Chromatography (IMAC) to isolate receptor

▫ Nickel column

▫ His tag binds to Ni

Picture sources: Wikimedia

Page 9: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

2. Protein purification and crystallization

• Separate isolated receptor proteins into 5 different solutions:

▫ R-Isoprenaline (full agonist)

▫ R,R-carmoterol (full agonist)

▫ R-salbutamol/albuterol (partial agonist)

▫ R-dobutamine (partial agonist)

▫ Cyanopindolol (antagonist)

• Hanging drop, vapor diffusion crystallization

Source: Wikipedia (Protein crystallization) Source: NASA

Page 10: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

3. X-ray crystallography and analysis

• Electron clouds diffracts x-ray beams

• Diffraction pattern can be used to create an electron density map

• Use computer software to fit known amino acid sequence into the electron density map

Picture sources: U of Arizona, Rice U

Page 11: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

Results

• All 4 agonists bind in the catecholamine pocket

Figure 1 – Structure of β1-adrenergic receptor bound to agonists

Page 12: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

Results

Figure 4 – Differences in the ligand-binding pocket between antagonist- and agonist-bound β1-adrenergic receptor

Orange: IsoprenalineGrey: Cyanopindolol

Page 13: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

• What does this all mean?

• Full agonists formed more hydrogen bonds to receptor helices than partial agonists

▫ Stabilization of ligand-binding pocket

• Full agonists induced key conformational changes in certain amino acid residues

▫ Ser212, Ser215

• Strengthen H5-H6 interface, weaken H4-H5 interface

▫ Facilitate movement of helixes to R* conformation

Results

Page 14: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

Results

• 3 major determinants of ligand efficacy:1. Ser212 conformational change

2. Ser215 conformational change

3. Stabilization of contracted ligand-binding pocket

• Full agonists achieved all 3

• Partial agonists failed at #2 and may be less successful at #3

▫ Supports hypothesis

• Antagonist functioned as very weak partial agonist

Page 15: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

Summary

• Agonist-receptor binding ▫ Stabilizes binding pocket

▫ Ease transition to R* state

• Partial agonist-receptor binding▫ Less stabilization of binding pocket

▫ Less conformational changes

• Antagonist-receptor binding▫ Little to no stabilization of binding pocket

▫ Little to no conformational changes

Page 16: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

Importance

• Still a lot of speculation

▫ 2 independent structures found for dobutamine-bound receptor

▫ Differences between thermostabilized and natural β1-adrenergic receptors

▫ Only initial binding state observed

• G-protein-coupled receptors have highly conserved amino acid sequences and structural similarities

• What applies to β1-adrenergic receptor probably applies to other G-protein coupled receptors as well

Page 17: The Structural Basis for Agonist and Partial Agonist

References

• Warne, T. et al. “Structural basis for agonist and partial agonist action on a β1-adrenergic receptor”. Nature. Vol469, pp 241-244 (13 Jan 2011).

• Warne, T. et al. “Development and crystallization of a minimal thermostabilised G-protein-coupled receptor”. Protein Expr. Purif. Vol 65, pp 204-213 (2009).