News Release

Effects of a major drug target regulated through molecular 'codes'

Peer-Reviewed Publication

Van Andel Research Institute

Rhodopsin Arrestin

image: This is a rhodopsinarrestin. view more 

Credit: Courtesy of Parker de Waal, Xu Laboratory, Van Andel Research Institute

July 27, 2017 (Grand Rapids, Mich.) -- A team spearheaded by Van Andel Research Institute scientists has answered a long-standing question that may lead to more effective drugs with fewer side effects for diseases ranging from heart failure to cancer.

The findings, published today in Cell, reveal for the first time components of a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) named rhodopsin bound to a signaling molecule called arrestin, both crucial pieces of the body's intricate cellular communication network. The new discovery further refines a landmark 2015 Nature article that first described the structure of the two molecules in complex together.

"Our revised structure is like a roadmap with additional details and geographic features filled in," said VARI Professor H. Eric Xu, Ph.D., the lead author of the new study as well as the 2015 article. "For years, the field has sought to answer exactly how arrestins interact with GPCRs. We hope the answer provided by our work, in the context of rhodopsin, will fuel new research and the design of better medications, to the ultimate benefit of patients around the world."

GPCRs are the largest group of cell surface receptors, and act as information clearinghouses by linking up with either arrestins or other signaling molecules called G proteins to relay critical instructions for countless biological functions, including growth and hormone regulation. These characteristics, coupled with their location on the surface of the cell, make them attractive targets for drug therapy. An estimated 30 percent of all medications currently on the market target GPCRs.

"Since arrestins and G proteins mediate different cellular responses, developing drugs that activate only one of these two pathways may produce fewer side-effects for patients," said Karsten Melcher, Ph.D., a senior author on the paper and associate professor at VARI. "The insight provided by our expanded structure could go a long way in guiding the design of these therapies."

To determine their augmented structure, Xu Lab Senior Research Scientist Edward Zhou, Ph.D., reanalyzed more than 22,000 individual images collected for the original 2015 study using a new version of CrystFEL software not available at the time. It revealed three previously hidden molecular components called phosphoryl groups on rhodopsin and three corresponding pockets on arrestin that act as docking stations. The specific arrangement of these phosphoryl groups—known as phosphorylation codes—are required for rhodopsin to bind to arrestin, much like the combination to a safe. Once complete, this interaction initiates one branch of a complex cellular communication network that regulates functions throughout the body.

"The big question then became, 'If this is happening with rhodopsin and arrestin, does it happen in all GPCRs?'" said Parker de Waal, a Van Andel Institute Graduate School student and member of Xu's lab. "Our results indicate that these codes -- these specific sequences of phosphoryl groups -- are found in whole or in part in most GPCRs. The findings help elegantly address a longstanding question within our field; why certain GPCRs bind arrestins better than others can now be explained by the existence of phosphorylation codes."

A tool to explore the prevalence of these codes across annotated GPCR data didn't exist, so de Waal created one. Part web GUI and part Python-based command line tool, PhosCoFinder allowed the team to rapidly search through the total set of all known GPCRs and predict potential phosphorylation codes.

As expected, more than half of the 825 GPCRs scanned by PhosCoFinder were found to contain phosphorylation codes within their C-terminal tail, a part of the GPCR that helps transfer information from the cell's environment to the inside of the cell. Most of the remaining GPCRs also were found to have codes; however, they were located in areas other than their C-terminal tails, possibly affecting the way they bind to arrestins. The next steps, Xu says, are to investigate whether these findings hold true across all GPCRs and other cell surface proteins that interact with arrestin.

"With biology, there's always more than one way of doing things," Xu said. "We want to follow those other avenues too in the hope that they help us further understand these critical mechanisms."

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PhosCoFinder is available to the scientific community by visiting http://tools.vai.org/phoscofinder.

The data for today's report was originally collected using the Linac Coherent Light Source, the world's first X-ray free electron laser, housed at the Department of Energy's SLAC National Accelerator Library at Stanford University. The findings were reported in Nature in 2015.

Study authors include X. Edward Zhou, Yuanzheng He, Parker W. de Waal, Xiang Gao, Yanyong Kang, Yanting Yin, Kuntal Pal, all of VARI (Zhou, He, de Waal and Gao also are affiliated with the Van Andel Research Institute -Shanghai Institute of Materia Medica); Ned Van Eps and Oliver P. Ernst of the University of Toronto; Devrishi Goswami and Patrick R. Griffin of The Scripps Insitute; Thomas A. White, Anton Barty and Henry N. Chapman of the Center for Free Electron Laser Science, Deutsches Elektronen-Synchrotron DESY; Naomi R. Latorraca and Ron O. Dror of Stanford University; Wayne L. Hubbell of University of California, Los Angeles; Raymond C. Stevens and Vadim Cherezov of University of Southern California; and Vsevolod V. Gurevich of Vanderbilt University. and Stevens also is affiliated with ShanghaiTech University.

This work was supported by National Institutes of Health award DK071662, the American Asthma Foundation, Van Andel Research Institute and Ministry of Science and Technology (China) grants 2012ZX09301001, 2012CB910403, XDB08020303 and 2013ZX09507001 for Xu; the Canada Excellence Research Chairs Program, the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research and the Anne and Max Tanenbaum Chair in Neuroscience for Ernst; NIH PO1 GM108635 for Cherezov; NIH RO1 EY011500 and R35 GM122491 for Gurevich; and the Jules Stein Professorship Endowment for Hubbell.

Research reported in this publication was supported by the National Institutes of Health under award numbers DK071662, EY011500 and GM122491. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

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Van Andel Institute (VAI) is an independent nonprofit biomedical research and science education organization committed to improving the health and enhancing the lives of current and future generations. Established by Jay and Betty Van Andel in 1996 in Grand Rapids, Michigan, VAI has grown into a premier research and educational institution that supports the work of more than 360 scientists, educators and staff. Van Andel Research Institute (VARI), VAI's research division, is dedicated to determining the epigenetic, genetic, molecular and cellular origins of cancer, Parkinson's and other diseases and translating those findings into effective therapies. The Institute's scientists work in onsite laboratories and participate in collaborative partnerships that span the globe. Learn more about Van Andel Institute or donate by visiting http://www.vai.org. 100% To Research, Discovery & Hope®


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