AI Article Synopsis

  • - Insect olfactory receptors, particularly ORco, are complex cation channels that interact with various ligands, and their function can be inhibited by specific small molecules derived from natural sources, leading to reduced olfactory capability in mosquitoes.
  • - Researchers developed a pharmacophore model based on structural features of identified antagonists that bind to the ORco agonist site, successfully using this model to screen for potential antagonists from a library of natural volatile compounds.
  • - The study compared in silico predictions and experimental results, confirming that the pharmacophore accurately identified a majority of orthosteric antagonists, and also created a support vector machine model to distinguish effective compounds from those that did not inhibit ORco function.

Article Abstract

Insect olfactory receptors are heteromeric ligand-gated cation channels composed of an obligatory receptor subunit, ORco, and one of many variable subunits, ORx, in as yet undefined molar ratios. When expressed alone ex vivo, ORco forms homotetrameric channels gated by ORco-specific ligands acting as channel agonists. Using an insect cell-based system as a functional platform for expressing mosquito odorant receptors ex vivo, we identified small molecules of natural origin acting as specific ORco channel antagonists, orthosteric or allosteric relative to a postulated ORco agonist binding site, which cause severe inhibition of olfactory function in mosquitoes. In the present communication, we have compiled common structural features of such orthosteric antagonists and developed a ligand-based pharmacophore whose properties are deemed necessary for binding to the agonist binding site and causing inhibition of ORco's biological function. In silico screening of an available collection of natural volatile compounds with the pharmacophore resulted in identification of several ORco antagonist hits. Cell-based functional screening of the same compound collection resulted in the identification of several compounds acting as orthosteric and allosteric antagonists of ORco channel function ex vivo and inducing anosmic behaviors to Aedes albopictus mosquitoes in vivo. Comparison of the in silico screening results with those of the functional assays revealed that the pharmacophore predicted correctly seven out of the eight confirmed orthosteric antagonists and none of the allosteric ones. Because the pharmacophore screen produced additional hits that did not cause inhibition of the ORco channel function, we also generated a support vector machine (SVM) model based on two descriptors of all pharmacophore hits. Training of the SVM on the ex vivo validated compound collection resulted in the selection of the confirmed orthosteric antagonists with a very low cross-validation out-of-sample misclassification rate. Employment of the combined pharmacophore-SVM platform for in silico screening of a larger collection of olfaction-relevant volatiles produced several new hits. Functional validation of randomly selected hits and rejected compounds from this screen confirmed the power of this virtual screening platform as a convenient tool for accelerating the pace of discovery of novel vector control agents. To the best of our knowledge, this study is the first one that combines a pharmacophore with a SVM model for identification of AgamORco antagonists and specifically orthosteric ones.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11652885PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jbc.2024.107939DOI Listing

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