4.7 Article

Structure-guided drug design: Conferring selectivity among neuronal nicotinic receptor and acetylcholine-binding protein subtypes

Journal

BIOCHEMICAL PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 74, Issue 8, Pages 1164-1171

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.bcp.2007.07.038

Keywords

nicotinic receptor structure; acetylcholine-binding protein; freeze-frame click chemistry; crystal structure; allosteric modulators; competitive ligand site; channel vestibule; fluorescence anisotropy; isotope exchange

Funding

  1. NIDA NIH HHS [U01 DA019372] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIGMS NIH HHS [R37 GM018360, R37 GM18360] Funding Source: Medline
  3. NINDS NIH HHS [U01 NS058046, F32 NS043063, F32 NS043063-01] Funding Source: Medline

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Neuronal nicotinic receptors, encoded by nine genes of the alpha and three of the beta type of subunits, and whose gene products assemble in distinct permutations as pentameric molecules, constitute a fertile area for structure-guided drug design. Design strategies are augmented by a wide variety of peptide, alkaloid and terpenoid toxins from various marine and terrestrial species that interact with nicotinic receptors. Also, acetylcholine-binding proteins from mollusks, as structural surrogates of the receptor that mimic its extracellular domain, provide atomic resolution templates for analysis of structure and response. Herein, we describe a structure-guided approach to nicotinic ligand design that employs crystallography of this protein as the basic template, but also takes into consideration the dynamic properties of the receptor molecules in their biological media. We present the crystallographic structures of several complexes of various agonists and antagonists that associate with the agonist site and can competitively block the action of acetylcholine. In so far as the extracellular domain is involved, we identify additional non-competitive sites at those subunit interfaces where agonists do not preferentially bind. Ligand association at these interface sites may modulate receptor function. Ligand binding is also shown by solution-based spectroscopic and spectrometric methods to affect the dynamics of discrete domains of the receptor molecule. The surrogate receptor molecules can then be employed to design ligands selective for receptor subtype through the novel methods of freeze-frame, click chemistry that uses the very structure of the target molecule as a template for synthesis of the inhibitor. (C) 2007 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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