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Methods Enzymol ; 602: 77-95, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29588042

ABSTRACT

General anesthetics are thought to allosterically bind and potentiate the inhibitory currents of the GABAA receptor through drug-specific binding sites. The physiologically relevant isoform of the GABAA receptor is a transmembrane ligand-gated ion channel consisting of five subunits (γ-α-ß-α-ß linkage) symmetrically arranged around a central chloride-conducting pore. Although the exact molecular structure of this heteropentameric GABAA receptor remains unknown, molecular modeling has allowed significant advancements in understanding anesthetic binding and action. Using the open-channel conformations of the homologous glycine and glutamate-gated chloride receptors as templates, a homology model of the GABAA receptor was constructed using the Discovery Studio computational chemistry software suite. Consensus structural alignment of the homology templates allowed for the construction of a three-dimensional heteropentameric GABAA receptor model with (γ2-ß3-α1-ß3-α1) subunit linkage. An anesthetic binding site was identified within the transmembrane α/ß intersubunit space by the convergence of three residues shown to be essential for anesthetic activity in previous studies with mutant mice (ß3-N265, ß3-M286, α1-L232). Propofol derivatives docked into this binding site showed log-linear correlation with experimentally derived GABAA receptor potentiation (EC50) values, suggesting this binding site may be important for receptor activation. The receptor-based pharmacophore was analyzed with surface maps displaying the predominant anesthetic-protein interactions, revealing an amphiphilic binding cavity incorporating the three residues involved in anesthetic modulation. Quantum mechanics calculations of the bonding patterns found in complementary high-resolution receptor systems further elucidated the complex nature of anesthetic-protein interactions.


Subject(s)
Anesthetics/pharmacology , Molecular Docking Simulation/methods , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , Receptors, GABA-A/metabolism , Algorithms , Anesthetics/chemistry , Binding Sites , Etomidate/chemistry , Etomidate/pharmacology , Ligands , Propofol/chemistry , Propofol/pharmacology , Protein Domains , Quantum Theory , Receptors, GABA-A/chemistry , Sequence Homology, Amino Acid , Software
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