posted on 2015-12-16, 22:25authored byGiulia Palermo, Pablo Campomanes, Marilisa Neri, Daniele Piomelli, Andrea Cavalli, Ursula Rothlisberger, Marco De Vivo
The serine hydrolase, fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH),
is responsible
for the intracellular degradation of anandamide and other bioactive
fatty acid ethanolamides involved in the regulation of pain, inflammation,
and other pathophysiological processes. The catalytic site of FAAH
is composed of multiple cavities with mixed hydrophobic and hydrophilic
properties, the role of which remains incompletely understood. Anandamide
is thought to enter the active site through a “membrane-access”
(MA) channel and position its flexible fatty acyl chain in a highly
hydrophobic “acyl chain-binding” (AB) cavity to allow
for hydrolysis to occur. Using microsecond molecular dynamics (MD)
simulations of FAAH embedded in a realistic membrane/water environment,
we show now that anandamide may not lock itself into the AB cavity
but may rather assume catalytically significant conformations required
for hydrolysis by moving its flexible arachidonoyl tail between the
MA and AB cavities. This process is regulated by a phenylalanine residue
(Phe432) located at the boundary between the two cavities, which may
act as a “dynamic paddle.” The results
identify structural flexibility as a key determinant by which FAAH
recognizes its primary lipid substrate.