Publication | Closed Access
A chemogenomic analysis of the transmembrane binding cavity of human G‐protein‐coupled receptors
222
Citations
176
References
2005
Year
Molecular PharmacologySignal TransductionMolecular PhysiologyBiochemistryFunctional SelectivityNatural SciencesG Protein-coupled ReceptorReceptor (Biochemistry)Molecular BiologyPhylogenetic TreeHuman G‐protein‐coupled ReceptorsChemogenomic AnalysisNeuropeptide ReceptorHuman GpcrsNon-peptide LigandTm CavityMedicineCell Signaling
The amino acid sequences of 369 human nonolfactory G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) have been aligned at the seven transmembrane domain (TM) and used to extract the nature of 30 critical residues supposed--from the X-ray structure of bovine rhodopsin bound to retinal--to line the TM binding cavity of ground-state receptors. Interestingly, the clustering of human GPCRs from these 30 residues mirrors the recently described phylogenetic tree of full-sequence human GPCRs (Fredriksson et al., Mol Pharmacol 2003;63:1256-1272) with few exceptions. A TM cavity could be found for all investigated GPCRs with physicochemical properties matching that of their cognate ligands. The current approach allows a very fast comparison of most human GPCRs from the focused perspective of the predicted TM cavity and permits to easily detect key residues that drive ligand selectivity or promiscuity.
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