| Literature DB >> 27160511 |
Eriko Nango1, Shuji Akiyama2,3, Saori Maki-Yonekura1, Yuji Ashikawa1, Yuko Kusakabe4, Elena Krayukhina5, Takahiro Maruno5, Susumu Uchiyama5,6, Nipawan Nuemket1,7, Koji Yonekura1, Madoka Shimizu4, Nanako Atsumi7, Norihisa Yasui7, Takaaki Hikima1, Masaki Yamamoto1, Yuji Kobayashi5, Atsuko Yamashita1,7.
Abstract
Sweet and umami tastes are perceived by T1r taste receptors in oral cavity. T1rs are class C G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs), and the extracellular ligand binding domains (LBDs) of T1r1/T1r3 and T1r2/T1r3 heterodimers are responsible for binding of chemical substances eliciting umami or sweet taste. However, molecular analyses of T1r have been hampered due to the difficulties in recombinant expression and protein purification, and thus little is known about mechanisms for taste perception. Here we show the first molecular view of reception of a taste substance by a taste receptor, where the binding of the taste substance elicits a different conformational state of T1r2/T1r3 LBD heterodimer. Electron microscopy has showed a characteristic dimeric structure. Förster resonance energy transfer and X-ray solution scattering have revealed the transition of the dimerization manner of the ligand binding domains, from a widely spread to compactly organized state upon taste substance binding, which may correspond to distinct receptor functional states.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27160511 PMCID: PMC4861910 DOI: 10.1038/srep25745
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1Taste Receptor T1r Proteins from Medaka Fish (mf).
(a) Schematic drawing of the overall architecture of class C GPCR, where the codebook vector of each domain in LBD (gray dot) and the protomer torsion angle (the arrow) were depicted. (b) FSEC analysis of mf T1R2aLBD, mf T1R3LBD, and co-expression of the T1R2a and T1r3 proteins. (c) Dose-response curves for l-alanine and l-glutamine by the full-length mf T1r2a/T1r3 receptor in HEK293 cells. The error bars are ± SEM of 4–34 independent determinations. (d) The c(s) distribution of the purified mf T1r2a/3LBD, obtained from the data analysis of SV-AUC experiments.
Figure 2Electron microscopic observation of T1r2a/3LBD.
The top panels are negative-staining raw particle images of the purified T1r2a/3LBD, with close-up views of representative particles in the insets. The bottom panels are the representative two-dimensional class averages of particles. (a) The l-glutamine-bound state. (b) The ligand-free state.
Figure 3Conformational change of T1r2a/3 LBD upon taste substance binding.
(a) Dose-dependent FRET signal changes of the T1r2aLBD-Cerulean and T1r3LBD-Venus heterodimer for taste substance binding. The error bars are ± SEM of 3 independent determinations. (b,c) l-Glutamine (b) and l-alanine (c) binding to mfT1r2a/3LBD, measured by isothermal titration calorimetry. The upper and lower panels show the raw data and the integrated heat signals upon ligand injection, respectively, with binding isotherms fitted assuming 1 ligand: 1 heterodimer binding.
Figure 4Overall shapes of T1r2a/3 LBD in ligand-free and l-glutamine-bound states revealed by SAXS.
(a) SAXS curves of the ligand-free (red) and l-glutamine-bound (blue) forms of T1r2a/3 LBD. The inset indicates the Guinier plots of the ligand-free (red) and l-Gln-bound (blue) forms of T1r2a/3 LBD, for which the Guinier analyses were conducted by using the Q range (highlighted data points in the inset) from 0.01003 Å−1 to Qmax < 1.3/Rg. (b) Pair distribution functions, P(r), of the ligand-free (red) and l-gln-bound (blue) forms of T1r2a/3 LBD. Low-resolution models of the l-glutamine bound state (c) and the ligand-free state (d). The representative models were presented as smooth molecular envelopes, onto which the high-resolution models of the glutamate-bound A-state structure of mGluR1LBD (PDB 1EWK) and the ligand-free R-state of mGluR1LBD (PDB 1EWT) were superimposed. The theoretical SAXS curves of the restored models are shown by solid lines in panel (a) and are in good agreement with the experimental curves.