Graduate School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, The University of Tokyo, Hongo, 113-0033 Tokyo, Japan.
Japan Biological Informatics Consortium, Aomi, 135-0064 Tokyo, Japan.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2018 Apr 10;115(15):3858-3863. doi: 10.1073/pnas.1722257115. Epub 2018 Mar 26.
Ethanol consumption leads to a wide range of pharmacological effects by acting on the signaling proteins in the human nervous system, such as ion channels. Despite its familiarity and biological importance, very little is known about the molecular mechanisms underlying the ethanol action, due to extremely weak binding affinity and the dynamic nature of the ethanol interaction. In this research, we focused on the primary in vivo target of ethanol, G-protein-activated inwardly rectifying potassium channel (GIRK), which is responsible for the ethanol-induced analgesia. By utilizing solution NMR spectroscopy, we characterized the changes in the structure and dynamics of GIRK induced by ethanol binding. We demonstrated here that ethanol binds to GIRK with an apparent dissociation constant of 1.0 M and that the actual physiological binding site of ethanol is located on the cavity formed between the neighboring cytoplasmic regions of the GIRK tetramer. From the methyl-based NMR relaxation analyses, we revealed that ethanol activates GIRK by shifting the conformational equilibrium processes, which are responsible for the gating of GIRK, to stabilize an open conformation of the cytoplasmic ion gate. We suggest that the dynamic molecular mechanism of the ethanol-induced activation of GIRK represents a general model of the ethanol action on signaling proteins in the human nervous system.
乙醇通过作用于人类神经系统中的信号蛋白,如离子通道,导致广泛的药理作用。尽管乙醇非常熟悉且具有重要的生物学意义,但由于其结合亲和力非常弱且乙醇相互作用具有动态性质,因此对其作用的分子机制知之甚少。在这项研究中,我们专注于乙醇的主要体内靶标,G 蛋白激活内向整流钾通道(GIRK),它负责乙醇诱导的镇痛作用。我们利用溶液 NMR 光谱技术,表征了乙醇结合引起的 GIRK 结构和动力学变化。我们在这里证明,乙醇与 GIRK 的结合具有 1.0 M 的表观离解常数,并且乙醇的实际生理结合位点位于 GIRK 四聚体相邻细胞质区域之间形成的腔中。通过基于甲基的 NMR 弛豫分析,我们揭示了乙醇通过改变构象平衡过程来激活 GIRK,这些过程负责 GIRK 的门控,以稳定细胞质离子门的开放构象。我们认为,乙醇诱导 GIRK 激活的动态分子机制代表了乙醇对人类神经系统中信号蛋白作用的一般模型。