Bokoch Michael P, Jo Hyunil, Valcourt James R, Srinivasan Yoga, Pan Albert C, Capponi Sara, Grabe Michael, Dror Ron O, Shaw David E, DeGrado William F, Coughlin Shaun R
Cardiovascular Research Institute , University of California , San Francisco , California 94158 , United States.
Department of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care , University of California , San Francisco , California 94143 , United States.
Biochemistry. 2018 Oct 2;57(39):5748-5758. doi: 10.1021/acs.biochem.8b00577. Epub 2018 Aug 27.
The pathways that G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) ligands follow as they bind to or dissociate from their receptors are largely unknown. Protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR1) is a GPCR activated by intramolecular binding of a tethered agonist peptide that is exposed by thrombin cleavage. By contrast, the PAR1 antagonist vorapaxar is a lipophilic drug that binds in a pocket almost entirely occluded from the extracellular solvent. The binding and dissociation pathway of vorapaxar is unknown. Starting with the crystal structure of vorapaxar bound to PAR1, we performed temperature-accelerated molecular dynamics simulations of ligand dissociation. In the majority of simulations, vorapaxar exited the receptor laterally into the lipid bilayer through openings in the transmembrane helix (TM) bundle. Prior to full dissociation, vorapaxar paused in metastable intermediates stabilized by interactions with the receptor and lipid headgroups. Derivatives of vorapaxar with alkyl chains predicted to extend between TM6 and TM7 into the lipid bilayer inhibited PAR1 with apparent on rates similar to that of the parent compound in cell signaling assays. These data are consistent with vorapaxar binding to PAR1 via a pathway that passes between TM6 and TM7 from the lipid bilayer, in agreement with the most consistent pathway observed by molecular dynamics. While there is some evidence of entry of the ligand into rhodopsin and lipid-activated GPCRs from the cell membrane, our study provides the first such evidence for a peptide-activated GPCR and suggests that metastable intermediates along drug binding and dissociation pathways can be stabilized by specific interactions between lipids and the ligand.
G蛋白偶联受体(GPCR)配体与受体结合或解离的途径在很大程度上尚不清楚。蛋白酶激活受体-1(PAR1)是一种GPCR,由凝血酶裂解后暴露的拴系激动剂肽的分子内结合激活。相比之下,PAR1拮抗剂vorapaxar是一种亲脂性药物,它结合在一个几乎完全与细胞外溶剂隔绝的口袋中。vorapaxar的结合和解离途径尚不清楚。从与PAR1结合的vorapaxar的晶体结构开始,我们进行了配体解离的温度加速分子动力学模拟。在大多数模拟中,vorapaxar通过跨膜螺旋(TM)束中的开口横向进入脂质双层从而离开受体。在完全解离之前,vorapaxar会在与受体和脂质头部基团相互作用稳定的亚稳态中间体中停留。预测在TM6和TM7之间延伸到脂质双层的烷基链修饰的vorapaxar衍生物在细胞信号测定中对PAR1的抑制作用的表观结合速率与母体化合物相似。这些数据与vorapaxar通过从脂质双层在TM6和TM7之间穿过的途径与PAR1结合一致,这与分子动力学观察到的最一致的途径相符。虽然有一些证据表明配体从细胞膜进入视紫红质和脂质激活的GPCR,但我们的研究首次为肽激活的GPCR提供了此类证据,并表明沿着药物结合和解离途径的亚稳态中间体可以通过脂质与配体之间的特定相互作用而稳定。