In by admin

NameMr. Arka Prabha Ray
EmailEmail hidden; Javascript is required.
OrganizationUniversity of Florida
PositionGraduate Student
InvitedNo
TypeOral
TopicPhysical Chemistry
Title

Membrane mimetic systems modulate GPCR energy landscapes

Author(s)

Arka Prabha Ray1, Naveen Thakur1, Beining Jin1, Nessa P. Afsharian1, Zhan-Guo Gao2, Kenneth A. Jacobson2, Matthew T. Eddy1

Author Location(s)

1Department of Chemistry, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, 32611, USA
2Laboratory of Bioorganic Chemistry, National Institute of Diabetes and Digestive and Kidney Diseases, National Institute of Health, Bethesda, MD, 20892, USA

Abstract

G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are sensory membrane proteins that control numerous physiological processes and are targeted by 35% of all FDA approved drugs. Previous NMR studies reported that the function-related conformational dynamics of GPCRs are modulated not only by small molecule ligands but also by lipids, including phospholipids and cholesterol.1-5 To investigate the impact of the employed membrane mimetic system on GPCR structural plasticity, we utilized 19F-NMR with detergent micelle and lipid nanodisc preparations of the human A2A adenosine receptor (A2AAR), a class A GPCR. As receptor function and dynamics are temperature dependent, our study compared A2AAR conformational dynamics in different membrane mimetics across a range of temperatures, ranging from lower temperatures typically employed in 19F-NMR experiments (e.g., 273 K) to physiological temperature.

With increasing temperature, lipid nanodisc samples containing A2AAR complexes with partially activating (partial agonists) and fully activating (agonists) drugs exhibited large increases in the population of a fully active conformation. This effect was particularly pronounced for A2AAR-complexes with partial agonists, where the population of active A2AAR was nearly undetectable at lower temperature but became evident at physiological temperature. Our data also show that the temperature-dependent response for complexes with either full or partial agonists exhibited a pronounced sensitivity to the specific membrane mimetic employed. In contrast to observations with lipid nanodiscs, in detergent micelles the active state population exhibited different temperature-dependent behavior for both full and partial agonists complexes. For complexes with partial agonists, the receptor adopted an inactive conformation in detergent micelle preparations even at physiological temperature. Measurements of cellular signaling correlated with the temperature-dependent conformational equilibria of A2AAR in lipid nanodiscs but not in detergents, underscoring the importance of the membrane environment in studies of GPCR function. The presented data provide clear evidence of the influence of the membrane environment on GPCR conformational dynamics, underscoring the significant influence of the properties of membrane environments on receptor function.

Acknowledgements:

This work was supported by NIH Grant R35GM138291 and NSF DMR1644779.

References:

1. Mizumura, T. et al. Activation of adenosine A2A receptor by lipids from docosahexaenoic acid revealed by NMR. Sci. Adv. 6, eaay8544 (2020).

2. Huang, S.K. et al. Allosteric modulation of the adenosine A2A receptor by cholesterol. eLife 11, e73901 (2022).

3. Abiko, L.A. et al. Filling of a water-free void explains the allosteric regulation of the β1-adrenergic receptor by cholesterol. Nat. Chem. 14, 1133-1141 (2022).

4. Thakur, N. et al. Anionic phospholipids control mechanisms of GPCR-G protein recognition. Nat. Comm. 14, 794 (2023).

5. Ray, A.P., Thakur, N., Pour, N.G. & Eddy, M.T. Dual mechanisms of cholesterol-GPCR interactions that depend on membrane phospholipid composition. Structure, S0969212623001569 (2023).

Date05/31/2024
Time10:15 AM