Mass spectrometry-based proteomics of human cannabinoid receptor 2: Covalent cysteine 6.47(257)-ligand interaction affording megagonist receptor activation

Dennis W. Szymanski, Malvina Papanastasiou, Katja Melchior, Nikolai Zvonok, Richard W. Mercier, David R. Janero, Ganesh A. Thakur, Sangwon Cha, Billy Wu, Barry Karger, Alexandros Makriyannis

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

35 Scopus citations

Abstract

The lack of experimental characterization of the structures and ligand-binding motifs of therapeutic G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) hampers rational drug discovery. The human cannabinoid receptor 2 (hCB2R) is a class-A GPCR and promising therapeutic target for small-molecule cannabinergic agonists as medicines. Prior mutational and modeling data constitute provisional evidence that AM-841, a high-affinity classical cannabinoid, interacts with cysteine C6.47(257) in hCB2R transmembrane helix 6 (TMH6) to afford improved hCB2R selectivity and unprecedented agonist potency. We now apply bottom-up mass spectrometry (MS)-based proteomics to define directly the hCB2R-AM-841 interaction at the amino-acid level. Recombinant hCB2R, overexpressed as an N-terminal FLAG-tagged/C-terminal 6His-tagged protein (FLAG-hCB2R-6His) with a baculovirus system, was solubilized and purified by immunochromatography as functional receptor. A multiplex multiple reaction monitoring (MRM)-MS method was developed that allowed us to observe unambiguously all seven discrete TMH peptides in the tryptic digest of purified FLAG-hCB2R-6His and demonstrate that AM-841 modifies hCB2R TMH6 exclusively. High-resolution mass spectra of the TMH6 tryptic peptide obtained by Q-TOF MS/MS analysis demonstrated that AM-841 covalently and selectively modifies hCB2R at TMH6 cysteine C6.47(257). These data demonstrate how integration of MS-based proteomics into a ligand-assisted protein structure (LAPS) experimental paradigm can offer guidance to structure-enabled GPCR agonist design.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)4789-4798
Number of pages10
JournalJournal of Proteome Research
Volume10
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - 7 Oct 2011

Keywords

  • agonist
  • covalent probe
  • drug discovery
  • electrospray ionization
  • GPCR
  • ligand binding domain
  • multiple reaction monitoring
  • protein structural biology

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Mass spectrometry-based proteomics of human cannabinoid receptor 2: Covalent cysteine 6.47(257)-ligand interaction affording megagonist receptor activation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this