| Literature DB >> 32148857 |
Jingjing Wang1,2,3,4, Meng Wu1,2, Lijie Wu1, Yueming Xu1, Fei Li1, Yiran Wu1, Petr Popov5, Lin Wang6, Fang Bai2,6, Suwen Zhao1,2, Zhi-Jie Liu1,2, Tian Hua1.
Abstract
Human muscarinic receptor M4 belongs to the class A subfamily of the G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). M4 has emerged as an attractive drug target for the treatment of Alzheimer's disease and schizophrenia. Recent results showed that M4-mediated cholinergic transmission is related to motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease. Selective ligand design for the five muscarinic acetylcholine receptor (mAchR) subtypes currently remains challenging owing to the high sequence and structural similarity of their orthosteric binding pockets. In order to obtain M4-selective antagonists, a new approach was tried to lock M4 into an inactive form by rationally designing an N4497.49R mutation, which mimics the allosteric sodium binding in the conserved sodium site usually found in class A GPCRs. In addition, the crystal structure of the mutation-induced inactive M4 was determined. By comparative analysis with other mAchR structures, followed by functional assays, the N4497.49R mutation was shown to stabilize M4 into an inactive state. Virtual screening of a focused ligand library using the crystal structure showed that the inactive M4 prefers antagonists much more than agonists. This study provides a powerful mutation strategy to stabilize GPCRs in inactive states and facilitate their structure determination. © Jingjing Wang et al. 2020.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; G-protein-coupled receptors; GPCRs; M4; Parkinson’s disease; ligand screening; muscarinic acetylcholine receptors; mutation design
Year: 2020 PMID: 32148857 PMCID: PMC7055379 DOI: 10.1107/S2052252520000597
Source DB: PubMed Journal: IUCrJ ISSN: 2052-2525 Impact factor: 4.769
List of mAChRs with known structures
| mAChR | Structure state | PDB code | Resolution (Å) | Ligand | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M1 | Inactive |
| 2.7 | Tiotropium | Thal |
| Active |
| 3.3 | Iperoxo | Maeda | |
| M2 | Inactive |
| 3.0 | QNB | Haga |
|
| 2.3 | NMS | Suno | ||
|
| 2.5 | NMS | Suno | ||
|
| 2.95 | AF-DX 384 | Suno | ||
|
| 3.0 | NMS | Suno | ||
|
| 2.6 | QNB | Suno | ||
| Active |
| 3.7 | Iperoxo, LY2119620 | Kruse | |
|
| 3.5 | Iperoxo | Kruse | ||
|
| 3.6 | Iperoxo, LY2119620 | Maeda | ||
| M3 | Inactive |
| 3.4 | Tiotropium | Kruse |
|
| 3.57 | Tiotropium | Kruse | ||
|
| 2.8 | Tiotropium | Kruse | ||
|
| 3.7 | NMS | Kruse | ||
|
| 3.1 | 6o(BS46) | Liu | ||
| M4 | Inactive |
| 2.6 | Tiotropium | Thal |
R-(2)-3-quinuclidinyl benzilate.
N-Methylscopolamine.
Data-collection and structure-refinement statistics for mutation-induced inactive M4
Values in parentheses are for the highest resolution shell.
| No ligand | HMDB0010212 docked | |
|---|---|---|
| Data collection | ||
| Wavelength (Å) | 1.000 | |
| Resolution range (Å) | 50.00–3.00 (3.08–3.00) | |
| Space group |
| |
|
| 56.10 | |
|
| 61.32 | |
|
| 203.74 | |
| Observed reflections | 398969 | |
| Unique reflections | 14718 | |
| Multiplicity | 27.1 (6.0) | |
| Completeness (%) | 99.7 (97.0) | |
| Mean | 19.3 (2.3) | |
| Wilson | 89.34 | |
|
| 0.132 (0.586) | |
| CC1/2
| 0.996 (0.379) | |
| Refinement | ||
| Resolution range (Å) | 49.14–3.00 | |
| Reflections (work/test) | 13985/731 | |
|
| 0.231/0.264 | |
| No. of atoms | ||
| Total | 3711 | 3734 |
| Macromolecules | 3711 | 3711 |
| Ligands | 0 | 23 |
| Solvent | 0 | 0 |
| No. of protein residues | 474 | 477 |
| R.m.s.d., bonds (Å) | 0.008 | 0.014 |
| R.m.s.d., angles (°) | 0.94 | 1.67 |
| Ramachandran statistics | ||
| Favoured (%) | 96.39 | 94.48 |
| Allowed (%) | 3.41 | 5.10 |
| Outliers (%) | 0.42 | 0.42 |
| Clashscore | 2.42 | 3.75 |
| PDB code |
| |
R merge = , where I(hkl) is the intensity of observation i of reflection hkl.
As defined by Karplus & Diederichs (2012 ▸).
R = for all reflections, where F obs and F calc are the observed and calculated structure factors, respectively. R free is calculated analogously for the test reflections, which were randomly selected and excluded from the refinement.
As defined by MolProbity (Chen et al., 2010 ▸).
Glycine residues 1075 and 1144 are in sharp-turn domains of the PGS fusion protein.
Figure 1Pharmacological characterization and thermostability assay of mutants of M4. (a, b) Dose–response studies of agonist Ach activity for each mutant compared with wild-type M4 (M4-WT). The EC50 values (mean ± SEM) of Ach are 1.059 ± 0.1489, 1.036 ± 0.139, 1.777 ± 0.6448, 2.314 ± 1.012, 0.9343 ± 0.1192 and 6.357 ± 1.262 nM for the M4-WT, T4598.49E, G1504.43A, S2195.62Y, I932.65T and I187ECL2A constructs, respectively. (c, d) Gi activation assays of M4 with the key point mutation N4497.49R and M4 with six mutations as a function of Ach compared with that of M4-WT. (e) Thermostability assay of the crystallization construct with six mutations (M4_6 mutations) and a construct with the other five mutations apart from N4497.49R (M4_5 mutations), where the fusion protein used in the constructs is PGS. (f) Thermostability assay of M4-N4497.49R and M4-WT with the fusion protein modified T4 lysozyme. The N4497.49R mutant showed an increase in the melting temperature (T m) by about 8.1 ± 1.1°C.
Figure 2Comparison of the mutation-induced inactive M4 structure with structures of M2 and M4 in inactive and active states. (a, b, c) M2 and M4 are aligned with the mutation-induced inactive M4 structure (teal blue). The M4–tiotropium structure is shown as an orange cartoon and the inactive and active M2 structures are shown as pale yellow and magenta cartoons, respectively. (d) Extracellular region comparison of mutation-induced inactive M4 and M4–tiotropium (PDB entry 5dsg) structures. (e) The highly conserved residues in orthosteric binding pockets for tiotropium and QNB. (f) The ‘tyrosine lid’ is formed by three tyrosines: Y6.51, Y3.33 and Y7.39. There is a 110° rotation of Y7.39 compared with that in M4–tiotropium; the arrow shows the rotation of Y4397.39 in the mutation-induced inactive M4 structure. (g) The different rotations of W6.48 in the mutation-induced inactive M4, active M2 and M4–tiotropium structures. (h, i) Comparison of the NPxxY and D(E)RY motifs between the inactive and active mAchR structures.
Figure 3The ionic networks in the mutation-induced inactive M4 structure. (a) Alignment of the structures of M2–AF-DX 384 (PDB entry 5zkb; grey cartoon) and mutation-induced inactive M4 (teal blue cartoon). (b) In the mutation-induced inactive M4 structure (top), S1193.39, D782.50 and R4497.49 form an ionic network, while in the M2 structure (bottom) D692.50, S4337.46 and R1103.39 form a salt-bridge interaction. (c) The distance between CG of D782.50 and CZ of R4497.49 during MD simulation of Ach-bound or tiotropium-bound M41 (top) and M46 (bottom). The detailed information is from the computational analysis of mutation-induced inactive M4. (d) Comparison of the sodium-binding site in the ZM241385–A2A structure (PDB entry 4eiy; lemon) and the ionic network around R4497.49 in mutation-induced inactive M4.
Molecular-dynamics simulation of the agonist Ach and the antagonist tiotropium with different forms of M4
| System | Mutation details | Ligand | Simulation time (µs) × No. of runs |
|---|---|---|---|
| PDB entry | None | Ach | 2 × 3 |
| Tiotropium | 2 × 3 | ||
| M40 | None | Ach | 2 × 3 |
| Tiotropium | 2 × 3 | ||
| M41 | N4497.49R | Ach | 2 × 3 |
| Tiotropium | 2 × 3 | ||
| M46 | I932.65T, G1504.43A, I187ECL2A, S2195.62Y, N4497.49R, T4598.49E | Ach | 2 × 3 |
| Tiotropium | 2 × 3 |
Figure 4Molecular-dynamics simulations of different forms [M4–tiotropium (PDB entry 5dsg), M40, M41 and M46] of M4. The last frames from the trajectories of the protein with Ach (a) and tiotropium (b) were aligned to show the locations of the ligands in M46 (purple), M41 (blue), M40 (red) and M4–tiotropium (PDB entry 5dsg; dark colour). (c) R.m.s.d. of the agonist Ach (top) and the antagonist tiotropium (bottom) with respect to the protein and its binding pocket during the simulations. Tiotropium is stable in the M46 and M41 templates when compared with Ach in the binding pocket.
Figure 5Molecular docking of muscarinic receptor ligands using the mutation-induced inactive M4 structure. (a) The results are listed with compounds in descending order of docking score along with the experimental pK i value. Antagonists and agonists are shown as blue and red dots, respectively. (b–f) The chemical structures and predicted binding poses of antagonists obtaining high scores in (a). (b) Tiotropium (green sticks), (c) atropine (yellow sticks), (d) umeclidinium (grey sticks), (e) propantheline (purple sticks) and (f) QNB (orange sticks).