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Structural basis of GPBAR activation and bile acid recognition

Authors :
Ruirui Lu
Jiuyao Zhou
Vincent C. Luca
Qianqian Ming
Qingya Shen
Kai Zhang
Linqi Zhang
Yan Zhang
Fan Yi
Shimeng Guo
Chunyou Mao
Fajun Nan
Chenlu Zhang
Fan Yang
Peng Xiao
Yuemao Shen
Shen-Ming Huang
Xin Xie
Xiaoying Liang
Changtao Jiang
Dan-Dan Shen
Jing-Yu Lin
Lulu Guo
Xiang Wu
Jin-Peng Sun
Xiao Yu
Yuqi Ping
Cheng Ma
Source :
Nature. 587:499-504
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

The G-protein-coupled bile acid receptor (GPBAR) conveys the cross-membrane signalling of a vast variety of bile acids and is a signalling hub in the liver–bile acid–microbiota–metabolism axis1–3. Here we report the cryo-electron microscopy structures of GPBAR–Gs complexes stabilized by either the high-affinity P3954 or the semisynthesized bile acid derivative INT-7771,3 at 3 A resolution. These structures revealed a large oval pocket that contains several polar groups positioned to accommodate the amphipathic cholic core of bile acids, a fingerprint of key residues to recognize diverse bile acids in the orthosteric site, a putative second bile acid-binding site with allosteric properties and structural features that contribute to bias properties. Moreover, GPBAR undertakes an atypical mode of activation and G protein coupling that features a different set of key residues connecting the ligand-binding pocket to the Gs-coupling site, and a specific interaction motif that is localized in intracellular loop 3. Overall, our study not only reveals unique structural features of GPBAR that are involved in bile acid recognition and allosteric effects, but also suggests the presence of distinct connecting mechanisms between the ligand-binding pocket and the G-protein-binding site in the G-protein-coupled receptor superfamily. Using cryo-electron microscopy, the authors report the structures of G-protein-coupled bile acid receptor–Gs complexes and reveal the structural basis of bile acid recognition.

Details

ISSN :
14764687 and 00280836
Volume :
587
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6e79e2cb3bf684d7008308ae731f2f4a