4.3 Article

A Heterozygous Mutation in the Third Transmembrane Domain Causes a Dominant-Negative Effect on Signalling Capability of the MC4R

Journal

OBESITY FACTS
Volume 1, Issue 3, Pages 155-162

Publisher

KARGER
DOI: 10.1159/000138251

Keywords

MC4R; Mutation; Dominant-negative effect; GPCR dimerization; H-bond network

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SFB 577 TP A9]
  2. Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) [NGFN-2 01GS0482/TP1, NGFN-2 01GS0492/TP13]

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Background: Heterozygous MC4R mutation is the most frequent cause of monogenic obesity. For most MC4R mutations a gene dosage effect seems to be the underlying mechanism. However, a dominant negative effect of a heterozygous MC4R mutation was recently identified, pointing to an additional mechanism of MC4R inactivation. Methods: The complete loss-of-function mutation (Ser136Phe), identified in a cohort of obese Austrian patients, was characterized for cell surface expression, signal transduction and ligand binding properties. Co-transfection studies tested for a dominant negative effect. Dimerization was investigated by a sandwich ELISA and by fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) approach. Potential intramolecular interactions of Ser136 were studied by homologous receptor modelling based on the crystal structure of the beta 2-adrenergic receptor. Results: The Ser136Phe mutation showed a dominant negative effect. The sandwich ELISA and FRET approach demonstrated dimerization of mutant and wild type receptor. Receptor modelling revealed an essential function of Ser136 at transmembrane helix 3 (TMH3) for establishing H-bonds between TMH2, TMH3, and TMH7. The mutation Ser136Phe most likely disrupts this network and leads to an incompetent helix-helix arrangement in the mutated receptor. Conclusion: Identification of dominant negative MC4R mutations is important to fully understand receptor function and to determine receptor regions that are involved in MC4R dimer activation.

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