Abstract

Gonadotropins bind to specific receptors in spite of sharing a high level of sequence and structural similarity. This specific binding is crucial for maintaining the reproductive health of an organism. In this study, residues that dictate the receptor binding specificity of the gonadotropins (FSH and LH) have been identified using combination of in silico methods. Docking studies (ZDOCK), based on the systematic replacement of these residues, confirmed its importance in receptor binding. An interesting observation is that the relative positioning of the residues conferring binding specificity varied for the gonadotropin-receptor complexes. This spatial difference of the key residues could be exploited for design of specific modulators. Based on the identified residues, we have rationally designed a peptidomimetic (FSHP) that displays good binding affinity and specificity for hFSHR. FSHP was developed by screening 3.9 million compounds using pharmacophore-shape similarity followed by fragment-based approach. It was observed that FSHP and hFSHâ can share the same receptor binding site thereby mimicking the native hFSHR-FSH interactions. FSHP also displayed higher binding affinity to hFSHR as compared to two reported hFSHR antagonists. MD simulation studies on hFSHR-FSHP complex revealed that FSHP is conformationally rigid and the intermolecular interactions are maintained during the course of simulation.

Highlights

  • G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) form the largest family of integral membrane proteins

  • Protein Data Bank (PDB ID: 1XWD), while the modeled, energy minimized structure of human LHR (hLHR)-LH was retrieved from Glycoprotein-hormone Receptors Information System database (GRIS) [31]

  • The crystal structure of hFSHR-FSH complex is available in PDB (PDB ID: 1XWD, 4AY9) [55,56] and the theoretical structure of hLHR-LH is available in the GRIS database

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Summary

Introduction

G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) form the largest family of integral membrane proteins. These proteins are evolutionarily conserved and share a common seven a-helical transmembrane domain in their structures [1,2,3]. They are activated by a large number of diverse ligands such as small compounds, peptides or large proteins. The gonadotropins viz., FSH, LH and CG are heterodimeric glycoprotein hormones They have a common asubunit and a hormone specific b-subunit [9,10]. While FSH binds to FSHR, the high sequence similarity (

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