4.7 Article

Mutations inducing divergent shifts of constitutive activity reveal different modes of binding among catecholamine analogues to the β2-adrenergic receptor

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 135, Issue 7, Pages 1715-1722

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0704622

Keywords

beta(2) adrenergic receptors; catecholamines; constitutive activity; adenylyl cyclase; receptor mutagenesis

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1 We compared the changes in binding energy generated by two mutations that shift in divergent directions the constitutive activity of the human beta(2) adrenergic receptor (beta(2)AR). 2 A constitutively activating mutant (CAM) and the double alanine replacement (AA mutant) of catechol-binding serines (S204A, S207A) in helix 5 were stably expressed in CHO cell lines, and used to measure the binding affinities of more than 40 adrenergic ligands. Moreover, the efficacy of the same group of compounds was determined as intrinsic activity for maximal adenylyl cyclase stimulation in wild-type beta(2)AR. 3 Although the two mutations had opposite effects on ligand affinity, the extents of change were in both cases largely correlated with the degree of ligand efficacy. This was particularly evident if the extra loss of binding energy due to hydrogen bond deletion in the AA mutant was taken into account. Thus the data demonstrate that there is an overall linkage between the configuration of the binding pocket and the intrinsic equilibrium between active and inactive receptor forms. 4 We also found that AA mutation-induced affinity changes for catecholamine congeners gradually lacking ethanolamine substituents were linearly correlated to the loss of affinity that such modifications of the ligand cause for wild-type receptor. This indicates that the strength of bonds between catechol ring and helix 5 is critically dependent on the rest of interactions of the beta-ethanolamine tail with other residues of the beta(2)-AR binding pocket. British Journal of Pharmacology.

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