Skip to main content
Login | Suomeksi | På svenska | In English

Browsing by Author "Karhu, Lasse"

Sort by: Order: Results:

  • Karhu, Lasse (2012)
    The orexinergic system is a central regulator for sleep-wake rhythm and energy homeostasis. Dysfunction of the system is at least one of the reasons behind narcolepsy, in addition to which insomnia, obesity and certain cancers could be treated by targeting orexin receptors. The orexin system in human comprises two receptor subtypes, orexin receptor 1 and 2 (OX₁R and OX₂R respectively) as well as two cognate ligands, peptides orexin-A and -B. In this study the focus is on OX₁R and orexin-A. The aims of the study are (1) to propose a binding mode for orexin-A to OX₁R and (2) to understand the molecular interactions of OX₁R leading to receptor activation. I order to create 3D molecular models of OX₁R, a sequence alignment of the eight G proteincoupled receptors (GPCRs) that have been crystallized up to date was first generated by ClustalX and adjusted based on the superimposition by SYBYL-X. Structurally conserved regions were deduced from the alignment and used to add the orexin receptors. Five different models built with MODELLER were selected for their large binding cavity among a large pool of models. These models were constructed based on the chemokine receptor 4 (PDB Id:3ODU), as such and a modified version where TM3 was moved by 1 Å further from the center of the binding cavity, from the β₂-adrenoceptor (PDB Id: 2RH1) and from the adenosine receptor A2A (PDB Id: 2YD0), as such and with rotamer changes to few binding site residues. Orexin-A with straight conformation found by NMR (PDB Id:1WSO) was docked to these models using ZDOCK and RDOCK. In addition, an in-house docking protocol was implemented, but could not be validated. Docking poses were scored by purpose built knowledge based scoring function and clustered. High scoring clusters were then used to converge to three different binding modes. As a result, we suggest that the binding site of OX₁R consists of two hydrophobic walls, one from TM3 and TM5, the other from TM6 and TM7. Binding modes include a hydrogen bond network between the ligand and especially binding site residues Gln1263.32, Thr2235.46, Asn3186.55, Lys3216.58 and Tyr3117.43. Based on the binding modes, it is suggested that the OX₁R is activated by similar binding site contraction as β-adrenoceptors and adenosine A2A. The contraction in could result from the hydrogen bonds between ligand, Gln1263.32, Thr2235.46 and Asn3186.55. The hydrogen bonding of Thr2235.46 can also disrupt interactions between TM5 and TM3, an interaction which is identified as an important factor in keeping the receptor in the inactive state. The role of other ligand residues would be to direct ligand binding and keep the ligand in the helical conformation.