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The conformation of neurotensin bound to its G protein-coupled receptor.


ABSTRACT: G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) mediate the perception of smell, light, taste, and pain. They are involved in signal recognition and cell communication and are some of the most important targets for drug development. Because currently no direct structural information on high-affinity ligands bound to GPCRs is available, rational drug design is limited to computational prediction combined with mutagenesis experiments. Here, we present the conformation of a high-affinity peptide agonist (neurotensin, NT) bound to its GPCR NTS-1, determined by direct structural methods. Functional receptors were expressed in Escherichia coli, purified in milligram amounts by using optimized procedures, and subsequently reconstituted into lipid vesicles. Solid-state NMR experiments were tailored to allow for the unequivocal detection of microgram quantities of 13C,15N-labeled NT(8-13) in complex with functional NTS-1. The NMR data are consistent with a disordered state of the ligand in the absence of receptor. Upon receptor binding, the peptide undergoes a linear rearrangement, adopting a beta-strand conformation. Our results provide a viable structural template for further pharmacological investigations.

SUBMITTER: Luca S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC196868 | biostudies-literature | 2003 Sep

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The conformation of neurotensin bound to its G protein-coupled receptor.

Luca Sorin S   White Jim F JF   Sohal Awinder K AK   Filippov Dmitri V DV   van Boom Jacques H JH   Grisshammer Reinhard R   Baldus Marc M  

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 20030905 19


G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) mediate the perception of smell, light, taste, and pain. They are involved in signal recognition and cell communication and are some of the most important targets for drug development. Because currently no direct structural information on high-affinity ligands bound to GPCRs is available, rational drug design is limited to computational prediction combined with mutagenesis experiments. Here, we present the conformation of a high-affinity peptide agonist (neuro  ...[more]

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