posted on 2019-08-28, 22:29authored byFlorian Koensgen, Franck Da Silva, Didier Rognan, Esther Kellenberger
Over the past decade, the ever-growing
structural information on
G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) has revealed the three-dimensional
(3D) characteristics of a receptor structure that is competent for
G-protein binding. Structural markers are now commonly used to distinguish
GPCR functional states, especially when analyzing molecular dynamics
simulations. In particular, the position of the sixth helix within
the seven transmembrane domains (TMs) is directly related to the coupling
of the G-protein. Here, we show that the structural pattern defined
by transmembrane intramolecular interactions (hydrogen bonds excluding
backbone/backbone interactions, ionic bonds and aromatic interactions)
is suitable for comparison of GPCR 3D structures and unsupervised
distinction of the receptor states. First, we analyze a microsecond
long molecular dynamic simulation of the human ß2-adrenergic
receptor (ADRB2). Clustering of the 3D structures by pattern similarity
identifies stable states which match the conformational classes defined
by structural markers. Furthermore, the method directly spots the
few state-specific interactions. Transforming pattern into graph,
we extend the method to the comparison of different GPCRs. Clustering
all GPCR experimentally determined structures by clique relative size
first separates receptors, then their conformational states, thereby
suggesting that the interaction patterns are specific of the receptor
sequence and that the interaction signatures of conformational states
are not shared across distant homologues.