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Computational Methods for Understanding the Selectivity and Signal Transduction Mechanism of Aminomethyl Tetrahydronaphthalene to Opioid Receptors

Opioid receptors are members of the group of G protein-couple receptors, which have been proven to be effective targets for treating severe pain. The interactions between the opioid receptors and corresponding ligands and the receptor’s activation by different agonists have been among the most impor...

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Autores principales: Xie, Peng, Zhang, Junjie, Chen, Baiyu, Li, Xinwei, Zhang, Wenbo, Zhu, Mengdan, Li, Wei, Li, Jianqi, Fu, Wei
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9000250/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35408572
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27072173
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author Xie, Peng
Zhang, Junjie
Chen, Baiyu
Li, Xinwei
Zhang, Wenbo
Zhu, Mengdan
Li, Wei
Li, Jianqi
Fu, Wei
author_facet Xie, Peng
Zhang, Junjie
Chen, Baiyu
Li, Xinwei
Zhang, Wenbo
Zhu, Mengdan
Li, Wei
Li, Jianqi
Fu, Wei
author_sort Xie, Peng
collection PubMed
description Opioid receptors are members of the group of G protein-couple receptors, which have been proven to be effective targets for treating severe pain. The interactions between the opioid receptors and corresponding ligands and the receptor’s activation by different agonists have been among the most important fields in opioid research. In this study, with compound M1, an active metabolite of tramadol, as the clue compound, several aminomethyl tetrahydronaphthalenes were designed, synthesized and assayed upon opioid receptors. With the resultant compounds FW-AII-OH-1 (Ki = 141.2 nM for the κ opioid receptor), FW-AII-OH-2 (Ki = 4.64 nM for the δ opioid receptor), FW-DI-OH-2 (Ki = 8.65 nM for the δ opioid receptor) and FW-DIII-OH-2 (Ki = 228.45 nM for the δ opioid receptor) as probe molecules, the structural determinants responsible for the subtype selectivity and activation mechanisms were further investigated by molecular modeling and molecular dynamics simulations. It was shown that Y(7.43) was a key residue in determining the selectivity of the three opioid receptors, and W(6.58) was essential for the selectivity of the δ opioid receptor. A detailed stepwise discovered agonist-induced signal transduction mechanism of three opioid receptors by aminomethyl tetrahydronaphthalene compounds was proposed: the 3–7 lock between TM3 and TM7, the DRG lock between TM3 and TM6 and rearrangement of I(3.40), P(5.50) and F(6.44), which resulted in the cooperative movement in 7 TMs. Then, the structural relaxation left room for the binding of the G protein at the intracellular site, and finally the opioid receptors were activated.
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spelling pubmed-90002502022-04-12 Computational Methods for Understanding the Selectivity and Signal Transduction Mechanism of Aminomethyl Tetrahydronaphthalene to Opioid Receptors Xie, Peng Zhang, Junjie Chen, Baiyu Li, Xinwei Zhang, Wenbo Zhu, Mengdan Li, Wei Li, Jianqi Fu, Wei Molecules Article Opioid receptors are members of the group of G protein-couple receptors, which have been proven to be effective targets for treating severe pain. The interactions between the opioid receptors and corresponding ligands and the receptor’s activation by different agonists have been among the most important fields in opioid research. In this study, with compound M1, an active metabolite of tramadol, as the clue compound, several aminomethyl tetrahydronaphthalenes were designed, synthesized and assayed upon opioid receptors. With the resultant compounds FW-AII-OH-1 (Ki = 141.2 nM for the κ opioid receptor), FW-AII-OH-2 (Ki = 4.64 nM for the δ opioid receptor), FW-DI-OH-2 (Ki = 8.65 nM for the δ opioid receptor) and FW-DIII-OH-2 (Ki = 228.45 nM for the δ opioid receptor) as probe molecules, the structural determinants responsible for the subtype selectivity and activation mechanisms were further investigated by molecular modeling and molecular dynamics simulations. It was shown that Y(7.43) was a key residue in determining the selectivity of the three opioid receptors, and W(6.58) was essential for the selectivity of the δ opioid receptor. A detailed stepwise discovered agonist-induced signal transduction mechanism of three opioid receptors by aminomethyl tetrahydronaphthalene compounds was proposed: the 3–7 lock between TM3 and TM7, the DRG lock between TM3 and TM6 and rearrangement of I(3.40), P(5.50) and F(6.44), which resulted in the cooperative movement in 7 TMs. Then, the structural relaxation left room for the binding of the G protein at the intracellular site, and finally the opioid receptors were activated. MDPI 2022-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9000250/ /pubmed/35408572 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27072173 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Xie, Peng
Zhang, Junjie
Chen, Baiyu
Li, Xinwei
Zhang, Wenbo
Zhu, Mengdan
Li, Wei
Li, Jianqi
Fu, Wei
Computational Methods for Understanding the Selectivity and Signal Transduction Mechanism of Aminomethyl Tetrahydronaphthalene to Opioid Receptors
title Computational Methods for Understanding the Selectivity and Signal Transduction Mechanism of Aminomethyl Tetrahydronaphthalene to Opioid Receptors
title_full Computational Methods for Understanding the Selectivity and Signal Transduction Mechanism of Aminomethyl Tetrahydronaphthalene to Opioid Receptors
title_fullStr Computational Methods for Understanding the Selectivity and Signal Transduction Mechanism of Aminomethyl Tetrahydronaphthalene to Opioid Receptors
title_full_unstemmed Computational Methods for Understanding the Selectivity and Signal Transduction Mechanism of Aminomethyl Tetrahydronaphthalene to Opioid Receptors
title_short Computational Methods for Understanding the Selectivity and Signal Transduction Mechanism of Aminomethyl Tetrahydronaphthalene to Opioid Receptors
title_sort computational methods for understanding the selectivity and signal transduction mechanism of aminomethyl tetrahydronaphthalene to opioid receptors
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9000250/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35408572
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules27072173
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