The Antagonist pGlu-betaGlu-Pro-NH2 Binds to an Allosteric Site of the Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone Receptor

Date

2021-09-05

Authors

De La Cruz, Daniel L.
Prokai, Laszlo
Prokai-Tatrai, Katalin

ORCID

0000-0001-5595-1346 (Prokai-Tatrai, Katalin)
0000-0002-4559-3458 (Prokai, Laszlo)

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Abstract

After we identified pGlu-betaGlu-Pro-NH2 as the first functional antagonist of the cholinergic central actions of the thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH, pGlu-His-Pro-NH2), we became interested in finding the receptor-associated mechanism responsible for this antagonism. By utilizing a human TRH receptor (hTRH-R) homology model, we first refined the active binding site within the transmembrane bundle of this receptor to enhance TRH's binding affinity. However, this binding site did not accommodate the TRH antagonist. This directed us to consider a potential allosteric binding site in the extracellular domain (ECD). Searches for ECD binding pockets prompted the remodeling of the extracellular loops and the N-terminus. We found that different trajectories of ECDs produced novel binding cavities that were then systematically probed with TRH, as well as its antagonist. This led us to establish not only a surface-recognition binding site for TRH, but also an allosteric site that exhibited a selective and high-affinity binding for pGlu-betaGlu-Pro-NH2. The allosteric binding of this TRH antagonist is more robust than TRH's binding to its own active site. The findings reported here may shed light on the mechanisms and the multimodal roles by which the ECD of a TRH receptor is involved in agonist and/or antagonist actions.

Description

Citation

De La Cruz, D. L., Prokai, L., & Prokai-Tatrai, K. (2021). The Antagonist pGlu-betaGlu-Pro-NH2 Binds to an Allosteric Site of the Thyrotropin-Releasing Hormone Receptor. Molecules (Basel, Switzerland), 26(17), 5397. https://doi.org/10.3390/molecules26175397

Rights

© 2021 by the authors.

License

Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0)