Pathway and mechanism of drug binding to G-protein-coupled receptors
Top Cited Papers
- 21 July 2011
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 108 (32) , 13118-13123
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1104614108
Abstract
How drugs bind to their receptors—from initial association, through drug entry into the binding pocket, to adoption of the final bound conformation, or “pose”—has remained unknown, even for G-protein-coupled receptor modulators, which constitute one-third of all marketed drugs. We captured this pharmaceutically critical process in atomic detail using the first unbiased molecular dynamics simulations in which drug molecules spontaneously associate with G-protein-coupled receptors to achieve final poses matching those determined crystallographically. We found that several beta blockers and a beta agonist all traverse the same well-defined, dominant pathway as they bind to theβ1- andβ2-adrenergic receptors, initially making contact with a vestibule on each receptor’s extracellular surface. Surprisingly, association with this vestibule, at a distance of 15 Å from the binding pocket, often presents the largest energetic barrier to binding, despite the fact that subsequent entry into the binding pocket requires the receptor to deform and the drug to squeeze through a narrow passage. The early barrier appears to reflect the substantial dehydration that takes place as the drug associates with the vestibule. Our atomic-level description of the binding process suggests opportunities for allosteric modulation and provides a structural foundation for future optimization of drug–receptor binding and unbinding rates.Keywords
This publication has 39 references indexed in Scilit:
- How Does a Drug Molecule Find Its Target Binding Site?Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2011
- Conserved Binding Mode of Human β2 Adrenergic Receptor Inverse Agonists and Antagonist Revealed by X-ray CrystallographyJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2010
- Drug–target residence time: critical information for lead optimizationCurrent Opinion in Chemical Biology, 2010
- A Lipid Pathway for Ligand Binding Is Necessary for a Cannabinoid G Protein-coupled ReceptorJournal of Biological Chemistry, 2010
- Ligand Entry and Exit Pathways in the β2-Adrenergic ReceptorJournal of Molecular Biology, 2009
- Structure-based discovery of β 2 -adrenergic receptor ligandsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2009
- Allosteric modulators of GPCRs: a novel approach for the treatment of CNS disordersNature Reviews Drug Discovery, 2009
- Electrostatic funneling of substrate in mitochondrial inner membrane carriersProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2008
- Structure of a β1-adrenergic G-protein-coupled receptorNature, 2008
- All-Atom Empirical Potential for Molecular Modeling and Dynamics Studies of ProteinsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 1998