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

36 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

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