Abstract

A novel "restoration of function" mutagenesis strategy was developed to identify amino acid sequence combinations necessary to restore the ability to bind delta-selective ligands to an inactive delta/mu receptor chimera in which 10 amino acids of the third extracellular loop of the delta receptor were replaced by the corresponding amino acids from the mu receptor (delta/mu291-300). This chimera binds a nonselective opioid ligand but is devoid of affinity for delta-selective ligands. A library of mutants was generated in which some of the 10 amino acids of the mu sequence of delta/mu291-300 were randomly reverted to the corresponding delta amino acid. Using a ligand binding assay, we screened this library to select mutants with high affinity for delta-selective ligands. Sequence analysis of these revertants revealed that a leucine at position 300, a hydrophobic region (amino acids 295-300), and an arginine at position 291 of the human delta-opioid receptor were present in all revertants. Single and double point mutations were then introduced in delta/mu291-300 to evaluate the contribution of the leucine 300 and arginine 291 residues for the binding of delta-selective ligands. An increased affinity for delta-selective ligands was observed when the tryptophan 300 (mu residue) of delta/mu291-300 was reverted to a leucine (delta residue). Further site-directed mutagenesis experiments suggested that the presence of a tryptophan at position 300 may block the access of delta-selective ligands to their docking site.

Highlights

  • The opioid receptors are widely distributed throughout the central nervous system and mediate the diverse effects of endogenous opioid peptides and opiate drugs [1]

  • In this paper we describe the design and use of a “restoration of function” mutagenesis strategy to identify residues of the human ␦-opioid receptor involved in the binding of subtypeselective ligands

  • Leucine 300 has been identified as a critical residue, and we proposed that residues at this particular position in other opioid receptor subtypes may play a role of exclusion of ␦-selective ligands

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Summary

EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

Construction of the Library of Mutants—pcDNA3-hDOR consists of a 1.2-kilobase cDNA EcoRI-XhoI fragment of the ␦-opioid receptor [23] sub-cloned at the EcoRI-XhoI site of pcDNA3 (Invitrogen). Each degenerated position contained an equal ratio of the nucleotide from the ␮ or the ␦ sequence This degenerated primer was used with a selection primer EcoRV to PvuI (5Ј-GCT CCT TCG GTC CTC CGA TCG TTG TCA GAA GTA AGT TGG C-3Ј) to perform a mutagenesis reaction on pcDNA3-␦/␮291–300. This synthesis mixture was transformed into Escherichia coli DH5␣ cells, and pools of clones were randomly selected. Cells transfected with pools of the library were assayed 48 h post-transfection for the binding of ␦-selective ligands [3H]DPDPE (peptide agonist) and [3H]SNC-121 (non-peptide agonist) [45]. The mixed molecular dynamics and conformational search procedure was developed in-house

RESULTS
Ϯ 2 NB
DISCUSSION
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