Unique and Common Agonists Activate the Insect Juvenile Hormone Receptor and the Human AHR.

J Mol Biol

Faculty of Science, University of South Bohemia, Ceske Budejovice 37005, Czech Republic; Institute of Entomology, Biology Center of the Czech Academy of Sciences, Ceske Budejovice 37005, Czech Republic. Electronic address:

Published: January 2025

Transcription factors of the bHLH-PAS family play vital roles in animal development, physiology, and disease. Two members of the family require binding of low-molecular weight ligands for their activity: the vertebrate aryl hydrocarbon receptor (AHR) and the insect juvenile hormone receptor (JHR). In the fly Drosophila melanogaster, the paralogous proteins GCE and MET constitute the ligand-binding component of JHR complexes. Whilst GCE/MET and AHR are phylogenetically heterologous, their mode of action is similar. JHR is targeted by several synthetic agonists that serve as insecticides disrupting the insect endocrine system. AHR is an important regulator of human endocrine homeostasis, and it responds to environmental pollutants and endocrine disruptors. Whether AHR signaling is affected by compounds that can activate JHR has not been reported. To address this question, we screened a chemical library of 50,000 compounds to identify 93 novel JHR agonists in a reporter system based on Drosophila cells. Of these compounds, 26% modulated AHR signaling in an analogous reporter assay in a human cell line, indicating a significant overlap in the agonist repertoires of the two receptors. To explore the structural features of agonist-dependent activation of JHR and AHR, we compared the ligand-binding cavities and their interactions with selective and common ligands of AHR and GCE. Molecular dynamics modeling revealed ligand-specific as well as conserved side chains within the respective cavities. Significance of predicted interactions was supported through site-directed mutagenesis. The results have indicated that synthetic insect juvenile hormone agonists might interfere with AHR signaling in human cells.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmb.2024.168883DOI Listing

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