4.6 Article

Characteristics of Neurokinin-3 Receptor and Its Binding Sites by Mutational Analysis

Journal

BIOLOGY-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biology10100968

Keywords

CRE luciferase assay; molecular docking; neurokinin B; neurokinin F; neuropeptides; nonpeptide tachykinin receptor antagonist; spermatogenesis; Tac3Ra; tachykinin receptors; tilapias

Categories

Funding

  1. Israel Science Foundation (ISF) [1540/17]

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The study reveals the crucial role of NKB receptors in fish reproduction and identifies the key binding residues and factors involved. Both in vitro and in vivo studies show that these residues are essential for receptor activity.
NKB (Neurokinin B) is already known to play a crucial role in fish reproduction, but little is known about the structure and function of NKB receptors. Based on an in silico model of the tilapia NKB receptor Tachykinin 3 receptor a (tiTac3Ra) found in the current study, we determined the key residues involved in binding to tilapia NKB and its functional homologue NKF (Neurokinin F). Despite studies in humans suggesting the crucial role of F251(6.44) and M289(7.43) in NKB binding, no direct peptide interaction was observed in tilapia homologs. In-silico, Ala mutations on residues F251(6.44) and M289(7.43) did not influence binding affinity, but significantly affected the stability of tiTac3Ra. Moreover, in vitro studies indicated them to be critical to tiNKB/tiNKF-induced receptor activity. The binding of NKB antagonists to tiTac3Ra both in-vitro and in vivo inhibits FSH (follicle stimulating hormone) and LH (luteinizing hormone) release and sperm production in mature tilapia males. Non-peptide NKB antagonist SB-222200 had a strong inhibitory effect on the Tac3Ra activation. SB-222200 also decreased LH plasma levels; two hours post intraperitoneal injection, changed sperm volume and the ratios of the different stages along the spermatogenesis in tilapia testes.

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