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Publication : Tyrosine 7.43 is important for mu-opioid receptor downstream signaling pathways activated by fentanyl.

First Author  Tian X Year  2022
Journal  Front Pharmacol Volume  13
Pages  919325 PubMed ID  36120357
Mgi Jnum  J:351520 Mgi Id  MGI:7340206
Doi  10.3389/fphar.2022.919325 Citation  Tian X, et al. (2022) Tyrosine 7.43 is important for mu-opioid receptor downstream signaling pathways activated by fentanyl. Front Pharmacol 13:919325
abstractText  G protein-coupled receptors can signal through both G proteins and ss-arrestin2. For the micro-opioid receptor (MOR), early experimental evidence from a single study suggested that G protein signaling mediates analgesia and sedation, whereas ss-arrestin signaling mediates respiratory depression and constipation. Then, receptor mutations were used to clarify which residues interact with ligands to selectively regulate signals in a ligand-specific manner. However, there is no systematic study on how to determine these residues and clarify the molecular mechanism of their influence on signal pathways. We have therefore used molecular docking to predict the amino acid sites that affect the binding of ligands and MOR. Then, the corresponding sites were mutated to determine the effect of the structural determinant of MOR on Gi/o protein and ss-arrestin pathways. The pharmacological and animal behavioral experiments in combination with molecular dynamics simulations were used to elucidate the molecular mechanism of key residues governing the signaling. Without affecting ligand binding to MOR, MOR(Y7.43A) attenuated the activation of both Gi/o protein and ss-arrestin signaling pathways stimulated by fentanyl, whereas it did not change these two pathways stimulated by morphine. Likewise, the activation peak time of extracellular regulated protein kinases was significantly prolonged at MOR(Y7.43A) compared with that at MOR(wildtype) stimulated by fentanyl, but there was no difference stimulated by morphine. In addition, MOR(Y7.43A) significantly enhanced analgesia by fentanyl but not by morphine in the mice behavioral experiment. Furthermore, the molecular dynamics simulations showed that H6 moves toward the cellular membrane. H6 of the fentanyl-Y7.43A system moved outward more than that in the morphine-Y7.43A system. Y7.43 mutation disrupted hydrophobic interactions between W6.48 and Y7.43 in the fentanyl-Y7.43A system but not in the morphine-Y7.43A system. Our results have disclosed novel mechanisms of Y7.43 mutation affecting MOR signaling pathways. Y7.43 mutation reduced the activation of the Gi/o protein pathway and blocked the ss-arrestin2 recruitment, increased the H6 outward movement of MOR, and disrupted hydrophobic interactions. This may be responsible for the enhanced fentanyl analgesia. These findings are conducive to designing new drugs from the perspective of ligand and receptor binding, and Y7.43 is also expected to be a key site to structure optimization of synthesized compounds.
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