Abstract

Melatonin (N-acetyl-5-methoxytryptamine) is a neurohormone which possesses a wide range of biological effects. The effects mediated by melatonin are in part attributed to the antioxidant properties of the molecule, which may act as scavenger of free radicals, and also to the binding of melatonin to its protein targets. For a long time, melatonin had been described as a ligand of a putative "receptor" present in the mammalian brain. Several studies were thus carried out with the goal of clarifying the nature of this melatonin "receptor," which led to the discovery of MT3 as the third melatonin binding site. This binding site was confirmed independently by several groups, and it was eventually demonstrated that MT3 was the enzyme quinone reductase 2 (NQO2). Among the different approaches used to validate that MT3 was indeed NQO2, the co-crystallization of NQO2 with melatonin was key in demonstrating the exact binding site and mode of melatonin to the enzyme and led to a clear understanding of the residues important for protein binding and inhibition. In this chapter, we described the details for the cloning, expression, and purification of the human enzyme NQO2. We also describe a detailed protocol for the crystallization of melatonin with this protein.

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