首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
     


A Unitary Anesthetic Binding Site at High Resolution
Authors:L. Sangeetha Vedula   Grace Brannigan   Nicoleta J. Economou   Jin Xi   Michael A. Hall   Renyu Liu   Matthew J. Rossi   William P. Dailey   Kimberly C. Grasty   Michael L. Klein   Roderic G. Eckenhoff     Patrick J. Loll
Affiliation:From the Departments of Anesthesiology and Critical Care and ;§Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104 and ;the Department of Biochemistry & Molecular Biology and ;the Graduate Program in Biochemistry, Drexel University College of Medicine, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19102
Abstract:Propofol is the most widely used injectable general anesthetic. Its targets include ligand-gated ion channels such as the GABAA receptor, but such receptor-channel complexes remain challenging to study at atomic resolution. Until structural biology methods advance to the point of being able to deal with systems such as the GABAA receptor, it will be necessary to use more tractable surrogates to probe the molecular details of anesthetic recognition. We have previously shown that recognition of inhalational general anesthetics by the model protein apoferritin closely mirrors recognition by more complex and clinically relevant protein targets; here we show that apoferritin also binds propofol and related GABAergic anesthetics, and that the same binding site mediates recognition of both inhalational and injectable anesthetics. Apoferritin binding affinities for a series of propofol analogs were found to be strongly correlated with the ability to potentiate GABA responses at GABAA receptors, validating this model system for injectable anesthetics. High resolution x-ray crystal structures reveal that, despite the presence of hydrogen bond donors and acceptors, anesthetic recognition is mediated largely by van der Waals forces and the hydrophobic effect. Molecular dynamics simulations indicate that the ligands undergo considerable fluctuations about their equilibrium positions. Finally, apoferritin displays both structural and dynamic responses to anesthetic binding, which may mimic changes elicited by anesthetics in physiologic targets like ion channels.Most general anesthetics alter the activity of ligand-gated ion channels, and electrophysiology, photolabeling, and transgenic animal experiments imply that this effect contributes to the mechanism of anesthesia (19). Although the molecular mechanism for this effect is not yet clear, photolabeling studies indicate that anesthetics bind within the transmembrane regions of Cys-loop ligand-gated ion channels such as the nicotinic acetylcholine and the γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA)2 type A receptors (2, 911). Practical difficulties associated with overexpression, purification, and crystallization of ion channels have thus far stymied investigation of the structural and energetic bases underlying anesthetic recognition. However, general anesthetics also bind specifically to sites in soluble proteins, including firefly luciferase, human serum albumin (HSA), and horse spleen apoferritin (HSAF) (1214), and x-ray crystal structures have been determined for complexes of these proteins with several general anesthetics (1416). In particular, HSAF is an attractive model for studying anesthetic-protein interactions because it has the highest affinity for anesthetics of any protein studied to date, has a unique anesthetic binding site, and is a multimer of 4-helix bundles, much like the putative anesthetic binding regions in ligand-gated channels. In addition, apoferritin is commercially available and crystallizes readily. Most importantly, however, the affinity of HSAF for a broad range of general anesthetics is highly correlated with anesthetic potency, confirming the utility and relevance of this model system (17).Ferritin is a 24-mer iron-binding protein. It sequesters free iron ions, thereby helping to maintain non-toxic levels of iron in the cell and functioning as a cellular iron reservoir (18, 19). Each subunit has a molecular mass of ∼20 kDa and adopts a 4-helix bundle fold. The 24-mer forms a hollow, roughly spherical particle with 432 symmetry. Two ferritin isoforms are found in mammals, heavy (H) and light (L), and 24-mers can contain all H chains, all L chains, or mixtures of varying stoichiometry; the biological significance of the H/L ratio is not yet clear (20).In addition to the large central cavity, the apoferritin 24-mer contains additional, smaller cavities at the dimer interfaces; these smaller cavities are of an appropriate size to accommodate anesthetics. X-ray crystallography has confirmed that this interfacial cavity is the binding site for the inhalational anesthetics halothane and isoflurane, and isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) measurements have shown that this interfacial site has a relatively high affinity for these anesthetics (Ka values ∼105 m−1) (14).General anesthetics fall into at least two broad classes, inhalational and injectable. Whereas both classes of drugs can induce the amnesia, immobility, and hypnosis associated with anesthesia, molecules in the two classes differ substantially in their chemical and physical properties. Prior to this work, only one crystal structure has been available for an injectable general anesthetic complexed with a protein-propofol, bound to HSA (16). This structure revealed that the propofol binding sites on this protein do not, by and large, overlap with the binding sites for inhalational anesthetics. This raises the question of whether the two types of drug invariably bind to separate sets of targets, or whether they could possibly transduce their effects by binding to a single protein site. To address this question we assessed whether propofol binds to the apoferritin site that had been previously identified as the binding site for inhalational anesthetics. Using x-ray crystallography, calorimetry, and molecular modeling, we show that the two types of anesthetics do indeed share a common binding site. We also investigated structure-binding relationships for a homologous series of propofol-like compounds and found that, remarkably, the energetics of binding to apoferritin precisely match the compound''s abilities to potentiate GABA effects at GABAA receptors, suggesting that similar structural and physicochemical factors mediate anesthetic recognition by both apoferritin and ligand-gated ion channels. This argues for the possibility that anesthetic binding might trigger structural and dynamic alterations in GABAA receptors similar to those observed in apoferritin, and that these changes underlie anesthetic effects.
Keywords:
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