首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
G蛋白偶联受体(G protein-coupled receptor,GPCR)在细胞信号转导过程中发挥关键的生理学功能,是极其重要的药物靶标,其三维结构信息对功能研究以及新药研发具有十分重要的意义。近年来,新技术的发展和应用使GPCR的结构生物学研究发生了跨越式的发展,本文简要回顾这些新的技术和方法以及已解析的GPCR三维结构,并以CCR5和P2Y12R两种受体的结构为例来具体阐明现阶段GPCR结构生物学研究的内容和意义。  相似文献   

2.
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) comprise the most important superfamily of protein targets in current ligand discovery and drug development. GPCRs are integral membrane proteins that play key roles in various cellular signaling processes. Therefore, GPCR signaling pathways are closely associated with numerous diseases, including cancer and several neurological, immunological, and hematological disorders. Computer-aided drug design (CADD) can expedite the process of GPCR drug discovery and potentially reduce the actual cost of research and development. Increasing knowledge of biological structures, as well as improvements on computer power and algorithms, have led to unprecedented use of CADD for the discovery of novel GPCR modulators. Similarly, machine learning approaches are now widely applied in various fields of drug target research. This review briefly summarizes the application of rising CADD methodologies, as well as novel machine learning techniques, in GPCR structural studies and bioligand discovery in the past few years. Recent novel computational strategies and feasible workflows are updated, and representative cases addressing challenging issues on olfactory receptors, biased agonism, and drug-induced cardiotoxic effects are highlighted to provide insights into future GPCR drug discovery.  相似文献   

3.
In recent years, GPCR targets from diverse regions of phylogenetic space have been determined. This effort has culminated this year in the determination of representatives of all major classes of GPCRs (A, B, C, and F). Although much of the now well established knowledge on GPCR structures has been known for some years, the new high-resolution structures allow structural insight into the causes of ligand efficacy, biased signaling, and allosteric modulation. In this digest the structural basis for GPCR signaling in the light of the new structures is reviewed and the use of the new non-class A GPCRs for drug design is discussed.  相似文献   

4.
Marta Filizola 《Life sciences》2010,86(15-16):590-597
For years, conventional drug design at G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) has mainly focused on the inhibition of a single receptor at a usually well-defined ligand-binding site. The recent discovery of more and more physiologically relevant GPCR dimers/oligomers suggests that selectively targeting these complexes or designing small molecules that inhibit receptor–receptor interactions might provide new opportunities for novel drug discovery. To uncover the fundamental mechanisms and dynamics governing GPCR dimerization/oligomerization, it is crucial to understand the dynamic process of receptor–receptor association, and to identify regions that are suitable for selective drug binding. This minireview highlights current progress in the development of increasingly accurate dynamic molecular models of GPCR oligomers based on structural, biochemical, and biophysical information that has recently appeared in the literature. In view of this new information, there has never been a more exciting time for computational research into GPCRs than at present. Information-driven modern molecular models of GPCR complexes are expected to efficiently guide the rational design of GPCR oligomer-specific drugs, possibly allowing researchers to reach for the high-hanging fruits in GPCR drug discovery, i.e. more potent and selective drugs for efficient therapeutic interventions.  相似文献   

5.
The discovery of β-arrestin-dependent GPCR signaling has led to an exciting new field in GPCR pharmacology: to develop “biased agonists” that can selectively target a specific downstream signaling pathway that elicits beneficial therapeutic effects without activating other pathways that elicit negative side effects. This new trend in GPCR drug discovery requires us to understand the structural and molecular mechanisms of β-arrestin-biased agonism, which largely remain unclear. We have used cutting-edge mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics, combined with systems, chemical and structural biology to study protein function, macromolecular interaction, protein expression and posttranslational modifications in the β-arrestin-dependent GPCR signaling. These high-throughput proteomic studies have provided a systems view of β-arrestin-biased agonism from several perspectives: distinct receptor phosphorylation barcode, multiple receptor conformations, distinct β-arrestin conformations, and ligand-specific signaling. The information obtained from these studies offers new insights into the molecular basis of GPCR regulation by β-arrestin and provides a potential platform for developing novel therapeutic interventions through GPCRs.  相似文献   

6.
Over the past half-century, The Journal of Biological Chemistry has been the venue for many landmark publications on the topic of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs, also known as seven-transmembrane receptors). The GPCR superfamily in humans is composed of about 800 members, and is the target of about one-third of all pharmaceuticals. Most of these drugs target a very small subset of GPCRs, and do so by mimicking or competing with endogenous hormones and neurotransmitters. This thematic minireview series examines some emerging trends in GPCR drug discovery. The first article describes efforts to systematically interrogate the human “GPCR-ome,” including more than 150 uncharacterized “orphan” receptors. The second article describes recent efforts to target alternative receptor binding sites with drugs that act as allosteric modulators of orthosteric ligands. The third article describes how the recent expansion of GPCR structures is providing new opportunities for computer-guided drug discovery. Collectively, these three articles provide a roadmap for the most important emerging trends in GPCR pharmacology.  相似文献   

7.
G protein‐coupled receptors (GPCRs) constitute the largest family of cell surface receptors that mediate numerous cell signaling pathways, and are targets of more than one‐third of clinical drugs. Thanks to the advancement of novel structural biology technologies, high‐resolution structures of GPCRs in complex with their signaling transducers, including G‐protein and arrestin, have been determined. These 3D complex structures have significantly improved our understanding of the molecular mechanism of GPCR signaling and provided a structural basis for signaling‐biased drug discovery targeting GPCRs. Here we summarize structural studies of GPCR signaling complexes with G protein and arrestin using rhodopsin as a model system, and highlight the key features of GPCR conformational states in biased signaling including the sequence motifs of receptor TM6 that determine selective coupling of G proteins, and the phosphorylation codes of GPCRs for arrestin recruitment. We envision the future of GPCR structural biology not only to solve more high‐resolution complex structures but also to show stepwise GPCR signaling complex assembly and disassembly and dynamic process of GPCR signal transduction.  相似文献   

8.
High-throughput, automated or semiautomated methodologies implemented by companies and structural genomics initiatives have accelerated the process of acquiring structural information for proteins via x-ray crystallography. This has enabled the application of structure-based drug design technologies to a variety of new structures that have potential pharmacologic relevance. Although there remain major challenges to applying these approaches more broadly to all classes of drug discovery targets, clearly the continued development and implementation of these structure-based drug design methodologies by the scientific community at large will help to address and provide solutions to these hurdles. The result will be a growing number of protein structures of important pharmacologic targets that will help to streamline the process of identification and optimization of lead compounds for drug development. These lead agonist and antagonist pharmacophores should, in turn, help to alleviate one of the current critical bottlenecks in the drug discovery process; that is, defining the functional relevance of potential novel targets to disease modification. The prospect of generating an increasing number of potential drug candidates will serve to highlight perhaps the most significant future bottleneck for drug development, the cost and complexity of the drug approval process.  相似文献   

9.
The first crystal structure of a G protein‐coupled receptor (GPCR) was that of the bovine rhodopsin, solved in 2000, and is a light receptor within retina rode cells that enables vision by transducing a conformational signal from the light‐induced isomerization of retinal covalently bound to the receptor. More than 7 years after this initial discovery and following more than 20 years of technological developments in GPCR expression, stabilization, and crystallography, the high‐resolution structure of the adrenaline binding β2‐adrenergic receptor, a ligand diffusible receptor, was discovered. Since then, high‐resolution structures of more than 53 unique GPCRs have been determined leading to a significant improvement in our understanding of the basic mechanisms of ligand‐binding and ligand‐mediated receptor activation that revolutionized the field of structural molecular pharmacology of GPCRs. Recently, several structures of eight unique lipid‐binding receptors, one of the most difficult GPCR families to study, have been reported. This review presents the outstanding structural and pharmacological features that have emerged from these new lipid receptor structures. The impact of these findings goes beyond mechanistic insights, providing evidence of the fundamental role of GPCRs in the physiological integration of the lipid signaling system, and highlighting the importance of sustained research into the structural biology of GPCRs for the development of new therapeutics targeting lipid receptors.  相似文献   

10.
《TARGETS》2003,2(1):19-25
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are a major opportunity for drug discovery in the post-genomic era. There are thought to be more than 500 therapeutically relevant GPCRs out of a total of over 700 identified to date, although only one, rhodopsin, has been the subject of a full 3D X-ray crystallography study. Two structurally related proteins, bacteriorhodopsin and sensory rhodopsin, which are not GPCRs but are part of the seven-helix membrane receptor family, have also been the subject of X-ray crystallographic studies and have been used in GPCR modeling studies. The significant differences between these rhodopsin structures, the relatively low sequence homology between individual GPCRs, and some difficulties in rationalizing point-mutation data suggests that homology-based molecular modeling alone will not provide the accurate structural information on individual receptors required for ligand design and in silico screening. In the absence of such structural information, several approaches can be used to assist in the discovery of ligands.  相似文献   

11.
G-protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) is one of the most important targets for medicines. Homology modeling based on the crystal structure of bovine rhodopsin is currently the most frequently used method for GPCR targeted drug design. Information about residue-residue contacts and the structural specificity in the subfamily is essential for constructing more precise 3D structures, to distinguish the structural differences between the template and targets. In this study, we adopted the covariation analysis to extract information about residue-residue interactions from the amino acid sequence. In the opsin family, a large number of adjacent covarying residue pairs were detected. The detected residue pairs have a strong tendency to gather in some regions important for the structure and function. These results suggest that the covariation analysis is practically utilized to detect adjacent residue pairs and also to apply for predicting functional sites. Analyses of other GPCR subfamilies, olfactory receptor and chemokine receptor families, demonstrated that some adjacent covarying residue pairs were common. Thus, the covariation analysis has possibilities in the substantial improvement of the 3D-structure modeling of GPCRs and in the detection of functional sites such as the ligand-binding sites.  相似文献   

12.
G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are important therapeutic targets for the treatment of human disease. Although GPCRs are highly successful drug targets, there are many challenges associated with the discovery and translation of small molecule ligands that target the endogenous ligand-binding site for GPCRs. Allosteric modulators are a class of ligands that target alternative binding sites known as allosteric sites and offer fresh opportunities for the development of new therapeutics. However, only a few allosteric modulators have been approved as drugs. Advances in GPCR structural biology enabled by the cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM) revolution have provided new insights into the molecular mechanism and binding location of small molecule allosteric modulators. This review highlights the latest findings from allosteric modulator-bound structures of Class A, B, and C GPCRs with a focus on small molecule ligands. Emerging methods that will facilitate cryo-EM structures of more difficult ligand-bound GPCR complexes are also discussed. The results of these studies are anticipated to aid future structure-based drug discovery efforts across many different GPCRs.  相似文献   

13.
Rhodopsin, the dim-light photoreceptor present in the rod cells of the retina, is both a retinal-binding protein and a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). Due to this conjunction, it benefits from an arsenal of spectroscopy techniques that can be used for its characterization, while being a model system for the important family of Class A (also referred to as “rhodopsin-like”) GPCRs. For instance, rhodopsin has been a crucial player in the field of GPCR structural biology. Until 2007, it was the only GPCR for which a high-resolution crystal structure was available, so all structure–activity analyses on GPCRs, from structure-based drug discovery to studies of structural changes upon activation, were based on rhodopsin. At present, about a third of currently available GPCR structures are still from rhodopsin. In this review, I show some examples of how these structures can still be used to gain insight into general aspects of GPCR activation. First, the analysis of the third intracellular loop in rhodopsin structures allows us to gain an understanding of the structural and dynamic properties of this region, which is absent (due to protein engineering or poor electron density) in most of the currently available GPCR structures. Second, a detailed analysis of the structure of the transmembrane domains in inactive, intermediate and active rhodopsin structures allows us to detect early conformational changes in the process of ligand-induced GPCR activation. Finally, the analysis of a conserved ligand-activated transmission switch in the transmembrane bundle of GPCRs in the context of the rhodopsin activation cycle, allows us to suggest that the structures of many of the currently available agonist-bound GPCRs may correspond to intermediate active states. While the focus in GPCR structural biology is inevitably moving away from rhodopsin, in other aspects rhodopsin is still at the forefront. For instance, the first studies of the structural basis of disease mutants in GPCRs, or the most detailed analysis of cellular GPCR signal transduction networks using a systems biology approach, have been carried out in rhodopsin. Finally, due again to its unique properties among GPCRs, rhodopsin will likely play an important role in the application of X-ray free electron laser crystallography to time-resolved structural biology in membrane proteins. Rhodopsin, thus, still remains relevant as a model system to study the molecular mechanisms of GPCR activation. This article is part of a Special Issue entitled: Retinal Proteins—You can teach an old dog new tricks.  相似文献   

14.
The recent revolution in cryo-EM has produced an explosion of structures at near-atomic or better resolution. This has allowed cryo-EM structures to provide visualization of bound small-molecule ligands in the macromolecules, and these new structures have provided unprecedented insights into the molecular mechanisms of complex biochemical processes. They have also had a profound impact on drug discovery, defining the binding modes and mechanisms of action of well-known drugs as well as driving the design and development of new compounds. This review will summarize and highlight some of these structures. Most excitingly, the latest cryo-EM technology has produced structures at 1.2 Å resolution, further solidifying cryo-EM as a powerful tool for drug discovery. Therefore, cryo-EM will play an ever-increasing role in drug discovery in the coming years.  相似文献   

15.
The largest single class of drug targets is the G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) family. Modern high-throughput methods for drug discovery require working with pure protein, but this has been a challenge for GPCRs, and thus the success of screening campaigns targeting soluble, catalytic protein domains has not yet been realized for GPCRs. Therefore, most GPCR drug screening has been cell-based, whereas the strategy of choice for drug discovery against soluble proteins is HTS using purified proteins coupled to structure-based drug design. While recent developments are increasing the chances of obtaining GPCR crystal structures, the feasibility of screening directly against purified GPCRs in the unbound state (apo-state) remains low. GPCRs exhibit low stability in detergent micelles, especially in the apo-state, over the time periods required for performing large screens. Recent methods for generating detergent-stable GPCRs, however, offer the potential for researchers to manipulate GPCRs almost like soluble enzymes, opening up new avenues for drug discovery. Here we apply cellular high-throughput encapsulation, solubilization and screening (CHESS) to the neurotensin receptor 1 (NTS1) to generate a variant that is stable in the apo-state when solubilized in detergents. This high stability facilitated the crystal structure determination of this receptor and also allowed us to probe the pharmacology of detergent-solubilized, apo-state NTS1 using robotic ligand binding assays. NTS1 is a target for the development of novel antipsychotics, and thus CHESS-stabilized receptors represent exciting tools for drug discovery.  相似文献   

16.
Precision oncology is premised on identifying and drugging proteins and pathways that drive tumorigenesis or are required for survival of tumor cells. Across diverse cancer types, the signaling pathway emanating from receptor tyrosine kinases on the cell surface to RAS and the MAP kinase pathway is the most frequent target of oncogenic mutations, and key proteins in this signaling axis including EGFR, SHP2, RAS, BRAF, and MEK have long been a focus in cancer drug discovery. In this review, we provide an overview of historical and recent efforts to develop inhibitors targeting these nodes with an emphasis on the role that an understanding of protein structure and regulation has played in inhibitor discovery and characterization. Beyond its well‐established role in structure‐based drug design, structural biology has revealed mechanisms of allosteric regulation, distinct effects of activating oncogenic mutations, and other vulnerabilities that have opened new avenues in precision cancer drug discovery.  相似文献   

17.
Among the most exciting recent developments in structural biology is the structure determination of G‐protein‐coupled receptors (GPCRs), which comprise the largest class of membrane proteins in mammalian cells and have enormous importance for disease and drug development. The GPCR structures are perhaps the most visible examples of a nascent revolution in membrane protein structure determination. Like other major milestones in science, however, such as the sequencing of the human genome, these achievements were built on a hidden foundation of technological developments. Here, we describe some of the methods that are fueling the membrane protein structure revolution and have enabled the determination of the current GPCR structures, along with new techniques that may lead to future structures.  相似文献   

18.
19.
High-throughput, automated or semiautomated methodologies implemented by companies and structural genomics initiatives have accelerated the process of acquiring structural information for proteins via x-ray crystallography. This has enabled the application of structure-based drug design technologies to a variety of new structures that have potential pharmacologic relevance. Although there remain major challenges to applying these approaches more broadly to all classes of drug discovery targets, clearly the continued development and implementation of these structure-based drug design methodologies by the scientific community at large will help to address and provide solutions to these hurdles. The result will be a growing number of protein structures of important pharmacologic targets that will help to streamline the process of identification and optimization of lead compounds for drug development. These lead agonist and antagonist pharmacophores should, in turn, help to alleviate one of the current critical bottlenecks in the drug discovery process; that is, defining the functional relevance of potential novel targets to disease modification. The prospect of generating an increasing number of potential drug candidates will serve to highlight perhaps the most significant future bottleneck for drug development, the cost and complexity of the drug approval process.  相似文献   

20.
G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are medically important membrane proteins that are targeted by over 30% of small molecule drugs. At the time of writing, 15 unique GPCR structures have been determined, with 77 structures deposited in the PDB database, which offers new opportunities for drug development and for understanding the molecular mechanisms of GPCR activation. Many different factors have contributed to this success, but if there is one single factor that can be singled out as the foundation for producing well-diffracting GPCR crystals, it is the stabilisation of the detergent-solubilised receptor-ligand complex. This review will focus predominantly on one of the successful strategies for the stabilisation of GPCRs, namely the thermostabilisation of GPCRs using systematic mutagenesis coupled with thermostability assays. Structures of thermostabilised GPCRs bound to a wide variety of ligands have been determined, which has led to an understanding of ligand specificity; why some ligands act as agonists as opposed to partial or inverse agonists; and the structural basis for receptor activation.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号