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Structural determinants of 5-HT2B receptor activation and biased agonism
Authors
AC Kruse
AJ McCoy
+54 more
Alexandra R. Tribo
AM Ring
Bemnat Agegnehu
BI Gustafsson
BL Roth
Bryan L. Roth
C Hofmann
C Wang
CB Roth
D Wacker
D Wacker
D Wacker
D Wacker
Daniel Wacker
DE Nichols
DM Bourdon
DP Staus
E Chun
JA Allen
JD McCorvy
JD McCorvy
JE Audia
Jian Jin
Jing Liu
John D. McCorvy
Katherine Lansu
M Berger
M Caffrey
M Jordan
NR Latorraca
P Emsley
PD Adams
R Nygaard
R Zanettini
RB Rothman
RC Stevens
Reid H. J. Olsen
S Ahuja
SG Rasmussen
SG Rasmussen
Sheng Wang
SP Vickers
T Che
T Papoian
T Sato
Tao Che
U Bredberg
V Cherezov
V Katritch
W Minor
W Yin
WK Kroeze
XP Huang
Y Peng
Publication date
1 January 2018
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
Abstract
Serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine; 5-HT) receptors modulate a variety of physiological processes ranging from perception, cognition and emotion to vascular and smooth muscle contraction, platelet aggregation, gastrointestinal function and reproduction. Drugs that interact with 5-HT receptors effectively treat diseases as diverse as migraine headaches, depression and obesity. Here we present four structures of a prototypical serotonin receptor—the human 5-HT2B receptor—in complex with chemically and pharmacologically diverse drugs, including methysergide, methylergonovine, lisuride and LY266097. A detailed analysis of these structures complemented by comprehensive interrogation of signaling illuminated key structural determinants essential for activation. Additional structure-guided mutagenesis experiments revealed binding pocket residues that were essential for agonist-mediated biased signaling and β-arrestin2 translocation. Given the importance of 5-HT receptors for a large number of therapeutic indications, insights derived from these studies should accelerate the design of safer and more effective medications. © 2018, The Author(s)
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Last time updated on 12/11/2020
Carolina Digital Repository
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cdr.lib.unc.edu:41687p88d
Last time updated on 24/11/2020