*** TEST ***
Helmholtz Gemeinschaft

Search
Browse
Statistics
Feeds

Allosteric coupling and biased agonism in G protein-coupled receptors

[thumbnail of Original Article]
Preview
PDF (Original Article) - Requires a PDF viewer such as GSview, Xpdf or Adobe Acrobat Reader
1MB

Item Type:Review
Title:Allosteric coupling and biased agonism in G protein-coupled receptors
Creators Name:Bock, A. and Bermudez, M.
Abstract:G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are essential cell membrane signaling molecules and represent the most important class of drug targets. Some signaling pathways downstream of a GPCR may be responsible for drug adverse effects while others mediate therapeutic efficacy. Biased ligands preferentially activate only a subset of all GPCR signaling pathways. They hold great potential to become next-generation GPCR drugs with less side effects due to their potential to exclusively activate desired signaling pathways. However, the molecular basis of biased agonism is poorly understood. GPCR activation occurs through allosteric coupling, the propagation of conformational changes from the extracellular ligand binding pocket to the intracellular G protein-binding interface. Comparison of GPCR structures in complex with G proteins or β-arrestin reveals that intracellular transducer coupling results in closure of the ligand binding pocket trapping the agonist inside its binding site. Allosteric coupling appears to be transducer-specific offering the possibility of harnessing this mechanism for the design of biased ligands. Here, we review the biochemical, pharmacological, structural and biophysical evidence for allosteric coupling and delineate that biased agonism should be a consequence of preferential allosteric coupling from the ligand binding pocket to one transducer binding site. As transducer binding leads to large structural rearrangements in the extracellular ligand binding pocket, we survey biased ligands with an extended binding mode that interact with extracellular receptor domains. We propose that biased ligands use ligand-specific triggers inside the binding pocket that are relayed through preferential allosteric coupling to a specific transducer, eventually leading to biased signaling.
Keywords:G Protein-Coupled Receptors, Allosteric Coupling, Biased Agonism, Biased Ligands, Drug Discovery
Source:FEBS Journal
ISSN:1742-464X
Publisher:Wiley
Volume:288
Number:8
Page Range:2513-2528
Date:April 2021
Official Publication:https://doi.org/10.1111/febs.15783
PubMed:View item in PubMed

Repository Staff Only: item control page

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

Open Access
MDC Library