Dynamic Mechanism for Subtype Selectivity of Endocannabinoids.

bioRxiv

Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Urbana, IL, 61801.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Endocannabinoids are natural molecules that interact with cannabinoid receptors to regulate various bodily functions, sparking interest in drugs targeting these receptors.
  • Current research has not fully explained how endocannabinoids selectively bind to different cannabinoid receptor subtypes, with recent studies suggesting a role of the receptor's N-terminus and its lipid access channel.
  • Two hypotheses are proposed for the selectivity of the endocannabinoid anandamide: one related to the specific interactions during binding due to N-terminus movement, and the other concerning the differences in binding pocket volume affecting ligand conformational entropy, supported by extensive molecular dynamics simulations.

Article Abstract

Endocannabinoids are naturally occurring lipid-like molecules that bind to cannabinoid receptors (CB and CB) and regulate many of human bodily functions via the endocannabinoid system. There is a tremendous interest in developing selective drugs that target the CB receptors. However, the biophysical mechanisms responsible for the subtype selectivity for endocannbinoids have not been established. Recent experimental structures of CB receptors show that endocannbinoids potentially bind via membrane using the lipid access channel in the transmembrane region of the receptors. Furthermore, the N-terminus of the receptor could move in and out of the binding pocket thereby modulating both the pocket volume and its residue composition. On the basis of these observations, we propose two hypothesis to explain the selectivity of the endocannabinoid, anandamide for CB receptor. First, the selectivity arises from distinct enthalpic ligand-protein interactions along the ligand binding pathway formed due to the movement of N-terminus and subsequent shifts in the binding pocket composition. Second, selectivity arises from the volumetric differences in the binding pocket allowing for differences in ligand conformational entropy. To quantitatively test these hypothesis, we perform extensive molecular dynamics simulations (∼0.9 milliseconds) along with Markov state modeling and deep learning-based VAMP-nets to provide an interpretable characterization of the anandamide binding process to cannabinoid receptors and explain its selectivity for CB. Our findings reveal that the distinct N-terminus positions along lipid access channels between TM1 and TM7 lead to different binding mechanisms and interactions between anandamide and the binding pocket residues. To validate the critical stabilizing interactions along the binding pathway, relative free energy calculations of anandamide analogs are used. Moreover, the larger CB pocket volume increases the entropic effects of ligand binding by allowing higher ligand fluctuations but reduced stable interactions. Therefore, the opposing enthalpy and entropy effects between the receptors shape the endocannabinoid selectivity. Overall, the CB selectivity of anandamide is explained by the dominant enthalpy contributions due to ligand-protein interactions in stable binding poses. This study shed lights on potential selectivity mechanisms for endocannabinoids that would aid in the discovery of CB selective drugs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11565827PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2024.10.25.620304DOI Listing

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