| Literature DB >> 29186792 |
Vsevolod V Gurevich1, Eugenia V Gurevich1.
Abstract
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are cell surface receptors that respond to a wide variety of stimuli, from light, odorants, hormones, and neurotransmitters to proteins and extracellular calcium. GPCRs represent the largest family of signaling proteins targeted by many clinically used drugs. Recent studies shed light on the conformational changes that accompany GPCR activation and the structural state of the receptor necessary for the interactions with the three classes of proteins that preferentially bind active GPCRs, G proteins, G protein-coupled receptor kinases (GRKs), and arrestins. Importantly, structural and biophysical studies also revealed activation-related conformational changes in these three types of signal transducers. Here, we summarize what is already known and point out questions that still need to be answered. Clear understanding of the structural basis of signaling by GPCRs and their interaction partners would pave the way to designing signaling-biased proteins with scientific and therapeutic potential.Entities:
Keywords: G protein; GPCR; GRK; arrestin; cell signaling; conformational change
Mesh:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29186792 PMCID: PMC5751122 DOI: 10.3390/ijms18122519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Figure 1Conformational heterogeneity of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) and signaling. Unliganded GPCRs appear to exist in the equilibrium between multiple conformations (basal equilibrium), which the agonists partially shift towards active conformations [10]. It is likely that there are several “active” conformations of GPCRs (shown as Active 1, 2, and 3). The most realistic scenario is that the great majority of active conformations effectively couple to G proteins, GRKs, and arrestins. However, there likely are some that might preferentially engage distinct signal transducers, such as different G proteins, GRKs, and/or arrestins (this phenomenon is called biased signaling). While the idea that the receptor conformations preferred by G proteins and GRKs/arrestins do not fully overlap appears attractive, we do not have direct structural evidence to support it. Similarly, another idea that phosphates in different positions on the cytoplasmic GPCR elements encode distinct conformations of bound arrestins and therefore functional outcomes [11,12] is enticing, but it also awaits supporting structural evidence. The binding of presumably inactivating inverse agonists also does not shift the equilibrium to a single conformation, suggesting that there might be multiple different inactive states (shown as Inactive 1, 2, and 3). Whether any of these conformations facilitate the engagement of distinct interaction partners remains to be elucidated (shown as “?”).
Figure 2Comparison of the basal and “active” conformations of arrestin proteins. Crystal structures of arrestin-1 (Arr1) (PDB ID 1CF1) (left) [51] and 4ZWJ (right) [8], arrestin-2 (Arr2) (PDB ID 1G4M) (left) [50] and 4JQI (right) [63], short splice variant of arrestin-1, p44 (PDB ID 3UGU) (left) [65] and 4J2Q (right) [66], and arrestin-3 (PDB ID 3P2D) (left) [53] and (PDB ID 5TV1) (right) [67]. The elements with different conformations in active and inactive arrestins are shown, as follows: the C-tail, green (moves out of its basal position in the cavity of the N-domain in the process of receptor binding; absent in p44); inter-domain hinge, light blue (has essentially the same conformation in all activated arrestin structures, in contrast to a wide range of conformations in the basal state); β-strand XI, dark blue (it is register shifted by one residue in arrestin-2 and -3, which “flips” it by 180 degrees, and by two residues in arrestin-1 and p44, which moves it relative to the other parts of the molecule but does not change the exposed side chains); finger loop, red (moves towards the receptor, the tip becomes α-helical); 139-loop (also known as middle loop), violet (moves towards the N-domain); lariat loop extension, magenta (moves lariat loop towards the N-domain, out of its basal position, which removes two out of three negative charges from the polar core); the connector of the α-helix in the N-domain, pink. The twist of the two domains relative to each other (N-domain, teal; C-domain, gray) by 17–20 degrees is indicated by arrows.