Differential
Protein Dynamics of Regulators of G‑Protein
Signaling: Role in Specificity of Small-Molecule Inhibitors
Posted on 2018-02-20 - 00:00
Small-molecule
inhibitor selectivity may be influenced by variation
in dynamics among members of a protein family. Regulator of G-protein
Signaling (RGS) proteins are a family that plays a key role in G-Protein
Coupled Receptor (GPCR) signaling by binding to active Gα subunits
and accelerating GTP hydrolysis, thereby terminating activity. Thiadiazolidinones
(TDZDs) inhibit the RGS-Gα interaction by covalent modification
of cysteine residues in RGS proteins. Some differences in specificity
may be explained by differences in the complement of cysteines among
RGS proteins. However, key cysteines shared by RGS proteins inhibited
by TDZDs are not exposed on the protein surface, and differences in
potency exist among RGS proteins containing only buried cysteines.
We hypothesize that differential exposure of buried cysteine residues
among RGS proteins partially drives TDZD selectivity. Hydrogen–deuterium
exchange (HDX) studies and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations were
used to probe the dynamics of RGS4, RGS8, and RGS19, three RGS proteins
inhibited at a range of potencies by TDZDs. When these proteins were
mutated to contain a single, shared cysteine, RGS19 was found to be
most potently inhibited. HDX studies revealed differences in α4
and α6 helix flexibility among RGS isoforms, with particularly
high flexibility in RGS19. This could cause differences in cysteine
exposure and lead to differences in potency of TDZD inhibition. MD
simulations of RGS proteins revealed motions that correspond to solvent
exposure observed in HDX, providing further evidence for a role of
protein dynamics in TDZD selectivity.
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Shaw, Vincent
S.; Mohammadiarani, Hossein; Vashisth, Harish; Neubig, Richard R. (2018). Differential
Protein Dynamics of Regulators of G‑Protein
Signaling: Role in Specificity of Small-Molecule Inhibitors. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.7b13778