Back to Search Start Over

Molecular Mechanism of Agonism and Inverse Agonism in the Melanocortin Receptors

Authors :
Thue W. Schwartz
Birgitte Holst
Source :
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences. 994:1-11
Publication Year :
2003
Publisher :
Wiley, 2003.

Abstract

Among the rhodopsin-like 7TM receptors, the MC receptors are functionally unique because their high constitutive signaling activity is regulated not only by endogenous peptide agonists-MSH peptides-but also by endogenous inverse agonists, namely, the proteins agouti and AGRP. Moreover, the metal-ion Zn(2+) increases the signaling activity of at least the MC1 and MC4 receptors in three distinct ways: (1). by directly functioning as an agonist; (2). by potentiating the action of the endogenous agonist; and (3). by inhibiting the binding of the endogenous inverse agonist. Structurally the MC receptors are part of a small subset of 7TM receptors in which the main ligand-binding crevice, and especially extracellular loops 2 and 3, appear to be specially designed for easy ligand access and bias towards an active state of the receptor-i.e., constitutive activity. Thus, in the MC receptors extracellular loop 2 is ultrashort because TM-IV basically connects directly into TM-V, whereas extracellular loop 3 appears to be held in a particular, constrained conformation by a putative, internal disulfide bridge. The interaction mode for the small and well-defined zinc-ion between a third, free Cys residue in extracellular loop 3 and conceivably an Asp residue located at the inner face of TM-III gives important information concerning the activation mechanism for the MC receptors.

Details

ISSN :
17496632 and 00778923
Volume :
994
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........76518f6427f1ce9f3e1ded06770be9fe
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1749-6632.2003.tb03156.x