| Literature DB >> 27720449 |
Sebastian George Barton Furness1, Yi-Lynn Liang2, Cameron James Nowell2, Michelle Louise Halls2, Peter John Wookey3, Emma Dal Maso2, Asuka Inoue4, Arthur Christopoulos2, Denise Wootten2, Patrick Michael Sexton5.
Abstract
G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) signaling, mediated by hetero-trimeric G proteins, can be differentially controlled by agonists. At a molecular level, this is thought to occur principally via stabilization of distinct receptor conformations by individual ligands. These distinct conformations control subsequent recruitment of transducer and effector proteins. Here, we report that ligand efficacy at the calcitonin GPCR (CTR) is also correlated with ligand-dependent alterations to G protein conformation. We observe ligand-dependent differences in the sensitivity of the G protein ternary complex to disruption by GTP, due to conformational differences in the receptor-bound G protein hetero-trimer. This results in divergent agonist-dependent receptor-residency times for the hetero-trimeric G protein and different accumulation rates for downstream second messengers. This study demonstrates that factors influencing efficacy extend beyond receptor conformation(s) and expands understanding of the molecular basis for how G proteins control/influence efficacy. This has important implications for the mechanisms that underlie ligand-mediated biased agonism. VIDEO ABSTRACT.Entities:
Keywords: BRET; CTR; FRET; G protein-coupled receptor; GPCR; TIRF; calcitonin; calcitonin receptor; efficacy; native PAGE
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27720449 DOI: 10.1016/j.cell.2016.09.021
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cell ISSN: 0092-8674 Impact factor: 41.582