Publication | Open Access
New capsaicin analogs as molecular rulers to define the permissive conformation of the mouse TRPV1 ligand-binding pocket
21
Citations
48
References
2020
Year
Permissive ConformationMolecular BiologyChemical BiologyNew Capsaicin AnalogsMolecular RecognitionBiophysicsNovel Capsaicin AnalogsBiochemistryReceptor (Biochemistry)Conformational StudyMolecular ModelingMolecular DockingSignal TransductionNatural SciencesRational Drug DesignCapsaicin Receptor Trpv1MedicineDrug DiscoveryMolecular Rulers
The capsaicin receptor TRPV1 is an outstanding representative of ligand-gated ion channels in ligand selectivity and sensitivity. However, molecular interactions that stabilize the ligand-binding pocket in its permissive conformation, and how many permissive conformations the ligand-binding pocket may adopt, remain unclear. To answer these questions, we designed a pair of novel capsaicin analogs to increase or decrease the ligand size by about 1.5 Å without altering ligand chemistry. Together with capsaicin, these ligands form a set of molecular rulers for investigating ligand-induced conformational changes. Computational modeling and functional tests revealed that structurally these ligands alternate between drastically different binding poses but stabilize the ligand-binding pocket in nearly identical permissive conformations; functionally, they all yielded a stable open state despite varying potencies. Our study suggests the existence of an optimal ligand-binding pocket conformation for capsaicin-mediated TRPV1 activation gating, and reveals multiple ligand-channel interactions that stabilize this permissive conformation.
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