AI Article Synopsis

  • Researchers mutated important amino acids in the human M1 muscarinic receptor to study how these changes affected ligand binding, receptor activation, and interaction with G-proteins.
  • They tested two atypical agonists (N-desmethylclozapine and xanomeline) and two classical agonists (carbachol and oxotremorine), finding that mutations, especially at D105, reduced their effectiveness in activating the receptor.
  • The study concluded that both types of agonists use the same molecular mechanism to activate the receptor, with significant differences in how they interact with D105, which plays a crucial role in the persistent action of xanomeline.

Article Abstract

We mutated key amino acids of the human variant of the M1 muscarinic receptor that target ligand binding, receptor activation, and receptor-G protein interaction. We compared the effects of these mutations on the action of two atypical M1 functionally preferring agonists (N-desmethylclozapine and xanomeline) and two classical non-selective orthosteric agonists (carbachol and oxotremorine). Mutations of D105 in the orthosteric binding site and mutation of D99 located out of the orthosteric binding site decreased affinity of all tested agonists that was translated as a decrease in potency in accumulation of inositol phosphates and intracellular calcium mobilization. Mutation of D105 decreased the potency of the atypical agonist xanomeline more than that of the classical agonists carbachol and oxotremorine. Mutation of the residues involved in receptor activation (D71) and coupling to G-proteins (R123) completely abolished the functional responses to both classical and atypical agonists. Our data show that both classical and atypical agonists activate hM1 receptors by the same molecular switch that involves D71 in the second transmembrane helix. The principal difference among the studied agonists is rather in the way they interact with D105 in the orthosteric binding site. Furthermore, our data demonstrate a key role of D105 in xanomeline wash-resistant binding and persistent activation of hM1 by wash-resistant xanomeline.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.phrs.2015.04.002DOI Listing

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