research papers
Structural evidence for the binding of monocarboxylates and dicarboxylates at pharmacologically relevant extracellular sites of a pentameric ligand-gated ion channel
aUnité Dynamique Structurale des Macromolécules, Institut Pasteur, 25 Rue du Docteur Roux, F-75015 Paris, France, and bCentre National de la Recherche Scientifique, CNRS UMR3528, Biologie Structurale des Processus Cellulaires et Maladies Infectieuses, 25 Rue du Docteur Roux, F-75015 Paris, France
*Correspondence e-mail: zaineb.kammoun@parisdescartes.fr
GLIC is a bacterial homologue of the pentameric ligand-gated ion channels (pLGICs) that mediate the fast chemical neurotransmission of nerve signalling in eukaryotes. Because the activation and allosteric modulation features are conserved among prokaryotic and eukaryotic pLGICs, GLIC is commonly used as a model to study the allosteric transition and structural pharmacology of pLGICs. It has previously been shown that GLIC is inhibited by some carboxylic acid derivatives. Here, experimental evidence for carboxylate binding to GLIC is provided by solving its X-ray structures with a series of monocarboxylate and dicarboxylate derivatives, and two carboxylate-binding sites are described: (i) the `intersubunit' site that partially overlaps the canonical pLGIC orthosteric site and (ii) the `intrasubunit' vestibular site, which is only occupied by a subset of the described derivatives. While the intersubunit site is widely conserved in all pLGICs, the intrasubunit site is only conserved in cationic eukaryotic pLGICs. This study sheds light on the importance of these two extracellular modulation sites as potential drug targets in pLGICs.
Keywords: pentameric ligand-gated ion channel; GLIC; carboxylates; orthosteric site; vestibular site.
1. Introduction
Pentameric ligand-gated ion channels (pLGICs) are key receptors in the nervous system that mediate nerve signal propagation throughout the synapse. A variety of pharmacological molecules modulate pLGIC activity and thus modify their response towards their respective agonists. The unexpected occurrence of pLGIC orthologues in prokaryotes was discovered only a decade ago (Tasneem et al., 2005). Shortly afterwards, functional studies established that their activation and modulation mechanisms are similar to those in eukaryotes (Zimmermann & Dutzler, 2011; Weng et al., 2010). Therefore, thanks to their better disposition for structural studies, prokaryotic pLGICs were used as structural models for the characterization of the transition and dynamics of pLGICs, with the best characterized being that from Gloeobacter violaceus, which is named GLIC (Bocquet et al., 2007). Indeed, the structure of GLIC has been solved in several conformational states, including an apparently open state (Bocquet et al., 2009; Sauguet, Poitevin et al., 2013; Fourati et al., 2015), a resting-like state (Sauguet et al., 2014) and an intermediate locally closed state (Prevost et al., 2012), and in complexes with a range of pharmacological molecules, including general anaesthetics (Fourati et al., 2017, 2018; Laurent et al., 2016; Sauguet et al., 2016; Sauguet, Howard et al., 2013; Kinde et al., 2016; Hilf et al., 2010; Zimmermann et al., 2012). GLIC thus arose as a suitable tool to characterize the occurring during activation of pLGIC and its modulation at the molecular level.
Unlike the other pLGICs, GLIC displays a particular activation mechanism in which protons, rather than a sizable agonist, trigger ion-channel opening. We have recently characterized another bacterial pLGIC displaying a comparable response to pH, albeit with an opposite sensitivity, where receptor activation is triggered by alkaline pH (Hu et al., 2018). This latter receptor from a tubeworm symbiont bacterium, named sTeLIC, is strongly potentiated by a cinnamic acid derivative that binds at a specific vestibular site of the extracellular domain located behind the common pLGIC orthosteric site (Hu et al., 2018). Interestingly, GLIC is also modulated by cinnamic acid derivatives as well as other carboxylic acid derivatives such as caffeic and crotonic acids, which display consistent inhibition of GLIC currents (Prevost et al., 2013; Alqazzaz et al., 2016). While these compounds have been suggested to bind at the pLGIC orthosteric site in GLIC by no experimental data are yet available to support this hypothesis. On the other hand, we have also identified two acetate-binding sites in the X-ray structure of GLIC in the apparently open state, where acetate was used as a buffering agent in the crystallization solution (Sauguet, Poitevin et al., 2013; Fourati et al., 2015): (i) a vestibular site similar to the bromocinnamic acid site in the sTeLIC structure and (ii) a site partially overlapping with the canonical pLGIC orthosteric site. These sites were called the `intrasubunit' and `intersubunit' acetate sites, respectively, according to their localization within or between the receptor subunits. Our rationale for this study was to provide experimental evidence for the binding of carboxylate derivatives other than acetate to GLIC, especially those for which the modulation potency has previously been described, namely caffeic acid and crotonic acid (Alqazzaz et al., 2016; Prevost et al., 2013). While all of our attempts to crystallize GLIC with caffeic acid yielded only poorly diffracting crystals, we managed to solve the structure of GLIC in complex with crotonic acid, as well as with a series of other carboxylate derivatives (Table 1). We show that all of the carboxylate derivatives that we were able to co-crystallize with GLIC bind in the intersubunit site that partially overlaps the common pLGIC orthosteric site, and that only acetate, propionate and succinate bind in both the intersubunit and intrasubunit sites.
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2. Methods
2.1. Protein expression and purification
The expression and purification process was performed as described previously (Bocquet et al., 2009; Sauguet, Howard et al., 2013; Sauguet, Poitevin et al., 2013). Briefly, GLIC fused to maltose-binding protein was expressed in Escherichia coli C43 cells and solubilized from membranes using n-dodecyl-β-D-maltoside detergent. The protein was then subjected to affinity purification on amylose resin and, after maltose-binding protein cleavage, was further purified by with elution in 300 mM NaCl, 20 mM Tris–HCl, 2 g l−1 n-dodecyl-β-D-maltoside pH 7.6, and concentration using a 100 kDa cutoff filter.
2.2. Crystal preparation
All crystals were obtained by vapour diffusion in hanging drops at 18°C. The concentrated protein solution (10 g l−1, corresponding to a GLIC pentamer concentration of 55 µM), was mixed in a 1:1 ratio with a reservoir solution consisting of 16% (2.2 M) glycerol, 12–14.5% (34–41 mM) polyethylene glycol 4000, 2% (0.28 M) dimethyl sulfoxide, 400 mM sodium thiocyanate with the buffering carboxylic acid adjusted to pH 4 using NaOH–HCl. The concentration of the monocarboxylic or dicarboxylic acid compound used as a buffer in the reservoir solution was 100 mM, except for fumarate (30 mM) owing to a solubility issue. The quality of the crystals was improved by the microseeding technique: a suspension of crushed crystals grown in the same crystallization condition but in the presence of acetic acid/acetate was added upon setting up the crystallization experiment. Crystals appeared overnight with a parallelepiped-like shape and grew for one week before reaching their final dimensions. All of the crystals were directly flash-cooled in liquid nitrogen prior to data collection.
2.3. Data collection
X-ray data sets were collected on the PROXIMA 1 and PROXIMA 2 beamlines at the SOLEIL synchrotron, Gif-sur-Yvette, France and on the ID23-1 and ID29 beamlines at the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility (ESRF), Grenoble, France. Reflections were integrated using XDS (Kabsch, 2010) and further processed using programs from the CCP4 suite (Winn et al., 2011). As expected, crystals of GLIC grown at pH 4 were isomorphous to the previously described of the open-pore receptor and belonged to C121 (unit-cell parameters a = 113, b = 127, c = 185.8 Å, α = γ = 90, β = 101°) with one pentamer in the with the exception of the GLIC–succinate structure, in which two pentamers, oriented back to back, were found in the (unit-cell parameters a = 113, b = 127, c = 320 Å, α = γ = 90, β = 101°).
2.4. Phasing and refinement
The phases were directly calculated by performing rigid-body REFMAC5 (Murshudov et al., 2011) using PDB entry 3eam (Bocquet et al., 2009) as a starting model. The structure was then subjected to with REFMAC5 using restraints. The resulting model was improved by manual building in Coot (Emsley et al., 2010) and was subsequently refined using BUSTER (Blanc et al., 2004). The final structure was validated using the MolProbity web server (Chen et al., 2010). The data-processing and are presented in Table 2.
with
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3. Results
3.1. of GLIC in complex with propionate
We previously identified ten acetate-binding sites (two per monomer) within the high-resolution GLIC X-ray structure obtained from crystals grown at pH 4 in acetate buffer (Bocquet et al., 2007). These acetate molecules occupied five homologous intersubunit sites and five homologous intrasubunit sites (Fig. 1a). Here, we solved a 3.2 Å resolution structure of GLIC in complex with propionate obtained from crystals grown in a solution buffered at pH 4.0 using 100 mM propionate instead of acetate. Similarly to acetate, propionate molecules were found both in the intrasubunit site, where propionate interacts with the side chains of Tyr102 and Arg85, and in the intersubunit site at the bottom of the agonist site, where propionate interacts with Glu181 and Arg77 of one subunit and with Arg105 of the complementary subunit (Fig. 1b). The overall structure was similar to the acetate-bound structure (root-mean-square deviation of below 0.3 Å calculated over 310 residues), and no significant remodelling of the intrasubunit and intersubunit pockets was observed upon propionate binding.
3.2. of GLIC in complex with succinate
So far, only monocarboxylic acids have been reported to bind GLIC [acetic (Fourati et al., 2015), caffeic, cinnamic (Prevost et al., 2013) and crotonic acids (Alqazzaz et al., 2016)]. We thus aimed to check whether dicarboxylic acids are also able to bind GLIC similarly to monocarboxylates. A 2.5 Å resolution structure was obtained from crystals grown in a solution buffered at pH 4.0 using 0.1 M succinate (diC4). In this structure, two identical GLIC pentamers were found in the with a c unit-cell parameter that was twice as large as in the other structures described in this study (Supplementary Fig. S1a). Strong Fo − Fc densities, reminiscent of succinate binding, were observed in the intersubunit and intrasubunit sites, and succinate was modelled in both sites previously described to bind acetate or propionate (Fig. 2a). The succinate molecule bound in the intersubunit site is modelled with one of its carboxylate moieties superimposed on the position of acetate below Loop C. This carboxylate moiety interacts with the side chains of residues from two adjacent subunits: Arg77 (Loop A) and Glu181 (Loop C) from one subunit and Arg105 from the neighbouring subunit. The other carboxylic moiety of succinate interacts with the side-chain amino group of Asn152 from the complementary subunit (Fig. 2a).
The succinate molecule in the intrasubunit site displayed a higher flexibility than the intersubunit succinate, as seen in the different subunits. Indeed, the first succinate carboxylic moiety binds in the same way (in all subunits) as acetate: through a hydrogen bond to the hydroxyl group of the well conserved Tyr102 and a salt bridge to the guanidinium group of Arg85, which itself makes a salt bridge with Glu104. However, the second carboxylic moiety of the intrasubunit succinate molecule only interacts with the main-chain carbonyl group of Pro74, leading to different binding poses of succinate in the intrasubunit site in the different subunits (Supplementary Fig. S1b).
This analysis thus reveals new residues that are involved in carboxylate binding, namely the side chain of Asn152 in the intersubunit pocket and the main chain of Pro74 in the intrasubunit pocket (Supplementary Fig. S1c).
3.3. Crystal structures of GLIC in complex with malonate and glutarate
In attempt to check whether other dicarboxylic acids with different lengths are also able to bind GLIC, we solved crystal structures of GLIC in complex with malonate (diC3) and glutarate (diC5) at 2.9 and 2.65 Å resolution, respectively. Surprisingly, densities corresponding to malonate and glutarate were only found in the intersubunit sites, whereas a globular density, modelled as a chloride ion, was found in the intrasubunit sites of both structures (Figs. 2b and 2c). The first carboxylic groups of malonate and glutarate occupied the position of acetate, with a similar interaction pattern with Arg77, Glu181 and Arg105. The second carboxylic group of glutarate forms a hydrogen bond to Asn152, as for succinate, whereas that of malonate interacts with the side chain of Arg105 (Figs. 2b and 2c)
3.4. Crystal structures of GLIC in complex with crotonate and fumarate
We then tested for GLIC binding by unsaturated trans isomer crotonate (monoC4) at 0.1 M as a buffer produced co-crystals of GLIC that provided a 2.9 Å resolution structure in which a crotonate molecule occupied the intersubunit pocket, whereas the spherical density in the intrasubunit pocket was modelled as a chloride ion (Fig. 3a). The crotonate molecule was oriented along the axis between Arg77 and Asn152, as was observed for the succinate molecule present in the intersubunit pocket. This orientation partially overlaps with that previously described by molecular docking (Alqazzaz et al., 2016); in particular, Ile131 from the principal subunit and Phe42 from the complementary sububnit are in the vicinity of the hydrophobic part of crotonate (side chains at 4.6 and 3.4 Å, respectively, from the crotonate C2 atom) and could thus partially contribute to its coordination. However, Arg133 is not involved in direct crotonate coordination, although it can mediate Glu181 carboxyl stabilization through hydrogen bonding (Alqazzaz et al., 2016).
Using theThe trans isomer fumarate (diC4) was then used as a buffering agent at 0.03 M, producing a 2.9 Å resolution structure. A very similar orientation was adopted by fumarate in the intersubunit pocket, whereas a chloride ion again occupied the intrasubunit pocket (Fig. 3b). The first carboxylic acid moiety occupied the same position as acetate, near Arg77 and Arg105, and the C4 atom could be superimposed on the C4 atom of crotonate. The distances between the C4 atom and Glu181 or Asn152 were unchanged in the fumarate and crotonate structures, although Asn152 is involved in the coordination of fumarate but not crotonate through hydrogen bonding (Fig. 4).
are summarized in Table 24. Discussion
This work provides structural evidence of carboxylic acid binding to GLIC, as previously characterized by several functional studies. Although the carboxylates described to modulate GLIC (caffeic and cinnamic acid derivatives and crotonic acid) are actually allosteric inhibitors, all of the structures presented in this work show that they (also) bind the apparently open conformation of this ion channel. In particular, crotonic acid was described to be an inhibitor of GLIC, with an IC50 of 620 µM. It is however noteworthy that GLIC inhibition by crotonic acid was measured at pH 5.5. In the crystallization condition (pH 4), the proton concentration thus might be too high to allow the equilibrium to shift towards channel closure, even at 100 mM crotonate. At the molecular level, the intersubunit site that partially overlaps with the common pLGIC orthosteric site appears to be the principal binding site for carboxylates. Indeed, all of the monocarboxylic and dicarboxylic acids were found to bind in this pocket with a similar binding mode for the first carboxylic group involving Arg77 and Glu181 from one subunit and Arg105 from the neighbouring sububnit. For dicarboxylates, except for malonate, Asn152 from the complementary subunit contributes to the coordination of the second carboxylic group. For malonate, the molecule is too short to reach the Asn152 side chain and the second carboxylate is thus coordinated by Arg105. In the crotonate structure, the hydrophobic tail is partially coordinated by weak hydrophobic interactions involving Ile131 and Phe41. These latter residues have been suggested to be involved in crotonate-mediated inhibition of GLIC currents (Alqazzaz et al., 2016). Interestingly, this intersubunit site has also been described as a benzodiazepine-binding site in ELIC and a negative modulation potency was also attributed to it (Spurny et al., 2012). This further suggests that this pocket is likely to be a relevant pharmacological site within GLIC as well as other pLGICs. However, we could not rule out the possibility that other sites can accommodate carboxylates within the resting conformation of the receptor and be responsible for inhibition.
Besides this sub-orthosteric intersubunit site, we show here that the intrasubunit site can accommodate some of the carboxylates described in this study, namely propionate and succinate (Supplementary Fig. 2b). Why these carboxylate derivatives bind in this intrasubunit pocket while others do not is not completely obvious, at least based on the co-structures. Indeed, simple docking experiments with fumarate show that it could also bind to the intrasubunit site. Crotonic acid, which is a monocarboxylic derivative of fumarate, might be unable to stably bind the intrasubunit site because of the absence of the second carboxylic group and be easily replaced by chloride. It is also noteworthy that succinate has higher B factors (mean intersubunit Bsuccinate of 85.1 Å2 versus a mean intrasubunit Bsuccinate of 106.5 Å2) in the intrasubunit binding site than in the intersubunit binding site, as well as a higher variability of binding poses within the intrasubunit site (Supplementary Fig. S1b). Unlike the intersubunit succinate, where both carboxylic groups are tightly coordinated through hydrogen bonds to Arg85, Tyr102 and Glu104, the second carboxylic group of succinate in the intrasubunit site points almost freely towards the solvent and is only loosely coordinated through a hydrogen bond to the main chain of Pro74 in most of the modelled succinate poses. This flexibility might explain why fumarate, which is a cis-unsaturated (and thus more rigid) derivative of succinate, was not seen experimentally in the intrasubunit site. From a functional point of view, this intrasubunit site, which is also called the vestibular site, has already been described as a potent modulation site in other pLGICs. Indeed, along with the intersubunit site, the vestibular intrasubunit site has also been described as a benzodiazepine-binding site (Spurny et al., 2012). Interestingly, flurazepam potentiates ELIC at moderate concentrations but becomes an inhibitor at higher concentrations (over 200 µM). The authors correlate this bimodal modulation with intrasubunit versus intersubunit site binding, where flurazepam would promote ELIC potentiation when bound to the `high-affinity' intrasubunit site and inhibition, at higher concentrations, when bound to the `low-affinity' intersubunit site. Besides ELIC, sTeLIC, a receptor that we have recently characterized, is also positively modulated by cinnamic acid derivatives that bind to the intrasubunit vestibular site with a similar potency as flurazepam in ELIC (EC50 of 21 µM versus 12.5 µM for flurazepam; Hu et al., 2018). Both flurazepam and bromocinnamic acid in the vestibular sites of ELIC and sTeLIC, respectively, partially overlap with succinate bound to the GLIC intrasubunit site. However, bromocinnamic acid is more buried, with its bromophenyl ring pointing to the bottom of the cavity, while flurazepam extends further to the vestibule (Fig. 5a). Bromoethanol (Chen et al., 2017) and glycerol (Pan et al., 2012) have also been mapped in the vestibular cavity of ELIC. Importantly, this cavity seems to be conserved in eukaryotic cationic receptors, as revealed by analysis of the similar region in 5HT3 (Hu et al., 2018) and the α4β2 acetylcholine receptor X-ray structures (Fig. 5b). The consensus emerging from the different functional/structural studies in ELIC and sTeLIC is that the intersubunit site would be a negative modulation site and the intrasubunit site a potentiating site. In the case of GLIC, a comprehensive functional analysis of the effect of these carboxylates is required to link binding to modulation. Furthermore, the crystal structures of the same complexes with the closed form of GLIC would be necessary in order to predict the overall activating or inhibiting properties of these compounds, as recently shown for (Fourati et al., 2017). Unfortunately, the closed form of GLIC is very difficult to crystallize and diffracts at best only to a limited resolution (Sauguet et al., 2013).
At this point, it is tempting to speculate that the existence of two regulatory pockets that are rather close in space might be an evolutionary remnant of a primordial etc.).
in the extracellular domain of pLGIC likely involving amino-acid metabolism. More specifically, the direct catalytic decarboxylation of an amino acid might have been possible at some point during evolution of the pLGIC family in the vestibular site, with the product diffusing rapidly to the other (orthosteric) binding site, resulting in the coupled opening of the pore. Indeed, several agonists of pLGICs are directly derived from the simple decarboxylation of amino acids or derivatives thereof (GABA, 5HT3, histamine5. Conclusion
In conclusion, GLIC can accommodate monocarboxylate or dicarboxylate derivatives in two distinct sites of the extracellular domain. Some carboxylates are known to be allosteric inhibitors of GLIC, but others still need to be characterized from a functional point of view. At the molecular level, all of the carboxylates bind to the intersubunit site that partially overlaps the pLGIC orthosteric site, but only acetate, propionate and succinate bind in the intrasubunit vestibular site. This latter site is reported to be a potentiation site in other bacterial pLGICs and is conserved in eukaryotic cationic receptors. This vestibular site is likely to be a key pharmacological site and thus an important target for rational drug design against some neurological disorders involving human pLGICs.
Supporting information
Supplementary figures. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1107/S205979832000772X/ag5034sup1.pdf
Funding information
The following funding is acknowledged: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (grant No. PENTAGATE).
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