Peptide/Receptor Co-evolution Explains the Lipolytic Function of the Neuropeptide TLQP-21

2019
Summary Structural and functional diversity of peptides and GPCR result from long evolutionary processes. Even small changes in sequence can alter receptor activation, affecting therapeutic efficacy. We conducted a structure-function relationship study on the neuropeptide TLQP-21, a promising target for obesity, and its complement 3a receptor (C3aR1). After having characterized the TLQP-21/C3aR1 lipolytic mechanism, a homology modelingand molecular dynamics simulation identified the TLQP-21 binding motif and C3aR1 binding site for the human (h) and mouse (m) molecules. mTLQP-21 showed enhanced binding affinity and potency for hC3aR1 compared with hTLQP-21. Consistently, mTLQP-21, but not hTLQP-21, potentiates lipolysisin human adipocytes. These findings led us to uncover five mutations in the C3aR1 binding pocket of the rodent Murinaesubfamily that are causal for enhanced calculated affinity and measured potency of TLQP-21. Identifying functionally relevant peptide/receptor co-evolution mechanisms can facilitate the development of innovative pharmacotherapies for obesity and other diseases implicating GPCRs.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    83
    References
    11
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []
    Baidu
    map