Structural basis for constitutive activity and agonist-induced activation of the enteroendocrine fat sensor GPR119

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Structural basis for constitutive activity and agonist-induced activation of the enteroendocrine fat sensor GPR119. / Engelstoft, Maja Storm; Norn, C; Pedersen, Maria Hauge; Holliday, N D; Elster, L; Lehmann, J; Jones, R M; Frimurer, T M; Schwartz, T W.

In: British Journal of Pharmacology, Vol. 171, No. 24, 12.2014, p. 5774-89.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Engelstoft, MS, Norn, C, Pedersen, MH, Holliday, ND, Elster, L, Lehmann, J, Jones, RM, Frimurer, TM & Schwartz, TW 2014, 'Structural basis for constitutive activity and agonist-induced activation of the enteroendocrine fat sensor GPR119', British Journal of Pharmacology, vol. 171, no. 24, pp. 5774-89. https://doi.org/10.1111/bph.12877

APA

Engelstoft, M. S., Norn, C., Pedersen, M. H., Holliday, N. D., Elster, L., Lehmann, J., Jones, R. M., Frimurer, T. M., & Schwartz, T. W. (2014). Structural basis for constitutive activity and agonist-induced activation of the enteroendocrine fat sensor GPR119. British Journal of Pharmacology, 171(24), 5774-89. https://doi.org/10.1111/bph.12877

Vancouver

Engelstoft MS, Norn C, Pedersen MH, Holliday ND, Elster L, Lehmann J et al. Structural basis for constitutive activity and agonist-induced activation of the enteroendocrine fat sensor GPR119. British Journal of Pharmacology. 2014 Dec;171(24):5774-89. https://doi.org/10.1111/bph.12877

Author

Engelstoft, Maja Storm ; Norn, C ; Pedersen, Maria Hauge ; Holliday, N D ; Elster, L ; Lehmann, J ; Jones, R M ; Frimurer, T M ; Schwartz, T W. / Structural basis for constitutive activity and agonist-induced activation of the enteroendocrine fat sensor GPR119. In: British Journal of Pharmacology. 2014 ; Vol. 171, No. 24. pp. 5774-89.

Bibtex

@article{f606fb2dd8be452da06ae92abedd1c37,
title = "Structural basis for constitutive activity and agonist-induced activation of the enteroendocrine fat sensor GPR119",
abstract = "BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: GPR119 is a Gαs-coupled 7TM receptor activated by endogenous lipids such as oleoylethanolamide (OEA) and by the dietary triglyceride metabolite 2-monoacylglycerol. GPR119 stimulates enteroendocrine hormone and insulin secretion. But despite massive drug discovery efforts in the field, very little is known about the basic molecular pharmacology of GPR119.EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH: GPR119 receptor signalling was studied in transfected cells. Mutational mapping (30 mutations in 23 positions) was performed on residues required for ligand-independent and agonist-induced GPR119 activation (AR231453 and OEA). Novel Rosetta-based receptor modelling was applied, using a composite template approach with segments from different X-ray structures and fully flexible ligand docking.KEY RESULTS: The increased signalling induced by increasing the cell surface expression of GPR119 in the absence of agonist and the inhibitory effect of two synthetic inverse agonists demonstrated that GRP119 signals with a high degree of constitutive activity through the Gαs pathway. The mutational maps for AR231453 and OEA were very similar and, surprisingly, also similar to the mutational map for residues affecting the constitutive signalling - albeit with key differences. Surprisingly, almost all residues in extracellular loop-2b were important for the constitutive activity. The molecular modelling and docking demonstrated that AR231453 binds in a 'vertical' pocket in between mutational hits reaching from the centre of the receptor out to extracellular loop-2b.CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: The high constitutive activity of GPR119 should be taken into account in future drug discovery efforts, which can now be guided by the detailed knowledge of the physiochemical properties of the extended ligand-binding pocket.",
author = "Engelstoft, {Maja Storm} and C Norn and Pedersen, {Maria Hauge} and Holliday, {N D} and L Elster and J Lehmann and Jones, {R M} and Frimurer, {T M} and Schwartz, {T W}",
note = "{\textcopyright} 2014 The British Pharmacological Society.",
year = "2014",
month = dec,
doi = "10.1111/bph.12877",
language = "English",
volume = "171",
pages = "5774--89",
journal = "British Journal of Pharmacology",
issn = "0007-1188",
publisher = "Wiley",
number = "24",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Structural basis for constitutive activity and agonist-induced activation of the enteroendocrine fat sensor GPR119

AU - Engelstoft, Maja Storm

AU - Norn, C

AU - Pedersen, Maria Hauge

AU - Holliday, N D

AU - Elster, L

AU - Lehmann, J

AU - Jones, R M

AU - Frimurer, T M

AU - Schwartz, T W

N1 - © 2014 The British Pharmacological Society.

PY - 2014/12

Y1 - 2014/12

N2 - BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: GPR119 is a Gαs-coupled 7TM receptor activated by endogenous lipids such as oleoylethanolamide (OEA) and by the dietary triglyceride metabolite 2-monoacylglycerol. GPR119 stimulates enteroendocrine hormone and insulin secretion. But despite massive drug discovery efforts in the field, very little is known about the basic molecular pharmacology of GPR119.EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH: GPR119 receptor signalling was studied in transfected cells. Mutational mapping (30 mutations in 23 positions) was performed on residues required for ligand-independent and agonist-induced GPR119 activation (AR231453 and OEA). Novel Rosetta-based receptor modelling was applied, using a composite template approach with segments from different X-ray structures and fully flexible ligand docking.KEY RESULTS: The increased signalling induced by increasing the cell surface expression of GPR119 in the absence of agonist and the inhibitory effect of two synthetic inverse agonists demonstrated that GRP119 signals with a high degree of constitutive activity through the Gαs pathway. The mutational maps for AR231453 and OEA were very similar and, surprisingly, also similar to the mutational map for residues affecting the constitutive signalling - albeit with key differences. Surprisingly, almost all residues in extracellular loop-2b were important for the constitutive activity. The molecular modelling and docking demonstrated that AR231453 binds in a 'vertical' pocket in between mutational hits reaching from the centre of the receptor out to extracellular loop-2b.CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: The high constitutive activity of GPR119 should be taken into account in future drug discovery efforts, which can now be guided by the detailed knowledge of the physiochemical properties of the extended ligand-binding pocket.

AB - BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: GPR119 is a Gαs-coupled 7TM receptor activated by endogenous lipids such as oleoylethanolamide (OEA) and by the dietary triglyceride metabolite 2-monoacylglycerol. GPR119 stimulates enteroendocrine hormone and insulin secretion. But despite massive drug discovery efforts in the field, very little is known about the basic molecular pharmacology of GPR119.EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH: GPR119 receptor signalling was studied in transfected cells. Mutational mapping (30 mutations in 23 positions) was performed on residues required for ligand-independent and agonist-induced GPR119 activation (AR231453 and OEA). Novel Rosetta-based receptor modelling was applied, using a composite template approach with segments from different X-ray structures and fully flexible ligand docking.KEY RESULTS: The increased signalling induced by increasing the cell surface expression of GPR119 in the absence of agonist and the inhibitory effect of two synthetic inverse agonists demonstrated that GRP119 signals with a high degree of constitutive activity through the Gαs pathway. The mutational maps for AR231453 and OEA were very similar and, surprisingly, also similar to the mutational map for residues affecting the constitutive signalling - albeit with key differences. Surprisingly, almost all residues in extracellular loop-2b were important for the constitutive activity. The molecular modelling and docking demonstrated that AR231453 binds in a 'vertical' pocket in between mutational hits reaching from the centre of the receptor out to extracellular loop-2b.CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONS: The high constitutive activity of GPR119 should be taken into account in future drug discovery efforts, which can now be guided by the detailed knowledge of the physiochemical properties of the extended ligand-binding pocket.

U2 - 10.1111/bph.12877

DO - 10.1111/bph.12877

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 25117266

VL - 171

SP - 5774

EP - 5789

JO - British Journal of Pharmacology

JF - British Journal of Pharmacology

SN - 0007-1188

IS - 24

ER -

ID: 135450193