(Received for publication, November 6, 1996, and in revised form, January 9, 1997)
From the Department of Biochemistry, To determine ligand-binding sites of a
platelet-activating factor (PAF) receptor, alanine-scanning mutagenesis
was carried out. All 23 polar amino acids in the putative
7-transmembrane (TM) domains of a guinea pig PAF receptor were
individually replaced with alanine. The ligand-binding properties of
mutant receptors were determined after transient expression in COS-7
cells. Mutants in TM II (N58A, D63A), TM III (N100A, T101A, S104A) and
TM VII (D289A) displayed higher PAF-binding affinities than seen with the wild-type receptor. In contrast, mutants in TM V (H188A), TM VI
(H248A, H249A, Q252A), and TM VII (Q276A, T278A) showed lower
affinities. Representative mutants were then stably expressed in
Chinese hamster ovary cells to observe PAF-induced cellular signals
(arachidonate release, phosphatidylinositol hydrolysis, adenylyl
cyclase inhibition). An N100A mutant with the highest affinity was
constitutively active and was responsive to lyso-PAF, an inactive
derivative of PAF. One nanomolar PAF induced no signals in low affinity
mutants, an EC50 value for the wild-type receptor. Three histidines (His-188, His-248, His-249) might form a binding pocket for the phosphate group of PAF, since zinc effectively inhibited
ligand binding. Based on these results, a three-dimensional molecular
model of PAF and its receptor was generated using bacteriorhodopsin as
a reference protein.
Platelet-activating factor (PAF),1 is
a potent phospholipid mediator with diverse physiological actions on a
wide variety of cells and tissues. PAF is thought to play important
roles in allergic disorders, inflammation, shock, and some diseases and
also to have effects on the reproductive, cardiovascular, and central nervous systems (1-4). Despite the highly hydrophobic structure with a
glycerophospholipid skeleton, PAF binds to a cell surface receptor,
which was first cloned from a guinea pig lung cDNA library (5). The
PAF receptor, with a seven-transmembrane (TM) topology like that of
rhodopsin, belongs to a G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR) superfamily.
PAF receptor homologs in four mammalian species (guinea pig, human,
rat, and mouse) have been reported (6-12). The PAF receptors couple
with various second messenger systems including activation of
phospholipase A2, C, and D; activation of mitogen-activated
protein kinase, phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, and tyrosine kinases;
and inhibition of adenylyl cyclase, thus exerting pleiotropic effects
(13-15).
To date, a large body of information regarding ligand (agonist and
antagonist)-binding characteristics of GPCRs represented by
Such replacements generated both constitutively active and inactive
mutant receptors with altered affinities and altered cellular responses
to their ligands. These results strongly support the two-state model of
GPCR activation, which extends the ternary complex model based on
recent cumulative pharmacological evidence (17, 18). We describe here a
systematic approach to determine PAF-PAF receptor interactions, an
approach that will aid in screening inverse agonists (19). We also
generated a three-dimensional molecular model of the guinea pig PAF
receptor TM regions, based on our mutagenesis studies and using
bacteriorhodopsin as a reference protein. Thus, a pertinent explanation
was obtained for reports that zinc ions preferentially inhibit specific
PAF binding to its receptor in platelets (20, 21).
[3H]WEB 2086, [acetyl-3H]PAF C16,
[3H]arachidonic acid,
myo-[1,2-3H]inositol, and
125I-labeled sheep anti-mouse IgG F(ab Twenty-three
individual point mutations were introduced into pBluescript SK( COS-7
and CHO cells were maintained as monolayer cultures in Dulbecco's
modified Eagle's medium and Ham's F-12 medium, respectively, supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum and antibiotics. COS-7 cells
were plated in 12-well dishes, transfected with constructs encoding the
wild type and mutants using TRANSFECTAM (BioSepra, Inc., Marlborough,
MA) according to the manufacturer's protocol, and used for assay after
72 h. For construction of stable transformants, CHO cells were
transfected in the same manner and after 48 h were reseeded into
100-mm dishes. Clones resistant to Geneticin (1 mg/ml) were isolated
during a 10-day culture and tested for specific [3H]WEB
2086 binding. Clones were selected by the expression levels, recloned
by the limiting dilution, and maintained in the presence of 0.3 mg/ml
Geneticin.
CHO cells were seeded into
12-well dishes 24 h prior to assay. Transfected COS-7 cells
(described above) and Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) cells were washed
twice with Hepes-Tyrode's buffer (140 mM NaCl, 2.7 mM KCl, 1.8 mM CaCl2, 0.49 mM MgCl2, 12 mM NaHCO3, 5.6 mM D-glucose, 0.37 mM
NaH2PO4, 10 mM Hepes, pH 7.4)
containing 0.1% (w/v) of fatty acid-free bovine serum albumin
(Hepes-Tyrode's-BSA buffer) and incubated for 1 h at 25 °C
with [3H]WEB 2086 or [3H]PAF C16 in the
presence (for the nonspecific binding) or absence (for the total
binding) of 10 µM unlabeled WEB 2086 in the same buffer.
The concentrations for radioligands varied with the experiments. The
cells were then washed twice with the buffer and solubilized with 1%
Triton X-100. The radioactivity associated with the cells was measured
by liquid scintillation counting. In experiments to determine the
effects of divalent cations on specific [3H]PAF binding,
CaCl2 and MgCl2 were excluded from the
buffer.
Immunochemical detection of the cell
surface-expressed FLAG-tagged PAF receptors was done as described (23)
with some modifications. Transfected COS-7 cells in 12-well dishes were
washed twice with Ca2+, Mg2+-free
phosphate-buffered saline (PBS( CHO cells in 12-well dishes were
prelabeled with [3H]arachidonic acid (0.1 µCi/well) for
24 h in serum-free medium. The cells were washed twice with
Hepes-Tyrode's-BSA buffer and stimulated with ligands in the same
buffer. After a 6-min incubation, the radioactivity released into the
buffer, and that incorporated into the cells were measured separately.
The activity was expressed as percentages of the released radioactivity
against the incorporated one.
Two assay methods
were used. To detect the short term (15-s) response, an IP3
radioreceptor assay kit (DuPont NEN) was used. Briefly, CHO cells in
100-mm dishes were collected with PBS( CHO cells were seeded in 24-well dishes
24 h before experiments. After the medium was aspirated, the cells
were incubated in Hepes-Tyrode's-BSA buffer containing 0.5 mM 3-isobutyl-1-methylxanthine for 20 min at 37 °C.
Next, the cells were stimulated with 1 µM forskolin in
the presence of ligands for 20 min. The reaction was terminated by
aspiration of the supernatant and addition of 200 µl of 0.1 N HCl. After a 20-min incubation, the supernatant was
collected. cAMPs in the supernatant were determined using a
radioimmunoassay kit from Yamasa (Chiba, Japan).
Three-dimensional structures of bacteriorhodopsin and its
ligand retinal (25) were obtained from Brookhaven Protein Data Bank
(26) (PDB ID-code: 1BRD). The modeling was performed with the chimera
modeling system running on a NEC EWS 4800/330 work station, and a
restrained and full conjugate gradient geometry optimization was
carried out using a KOPT program (27). The united atom AMBER force
field parameter (28) was used with the cutoff for nonbonded
interactions of 10 Å and the distance-dependent dielectric
constant. The conjugate gradient was optimized with the termination
threshold of the maximum component of energy gradient of 0.1 kcal/mol/Å.
To explore the role of electrostatic interactions
between PAF and its receptor, alanine substitution was individually
introduced into a guinea pig PAF receptor (Fig. 1).
Wild-type and mutant receptors were transiently expressed in COS-7
cells, and ligand-binding properties were investigated (Table
I). The wild-type receptor displayed a
dose-dependent binding of agonist [3H]PAF C16
and antagonist [3H]WEB 2086 (data not shown). There was
no detectable specific binding of both ligands in untransfected or
vector (pcDNAI)-transfected cells (data not shown). To determine
whether these mutations alter PAF binding affinity, a concentration of
3 nM near the Kd value (3.6 nM in the wild-type receptor) was chosen for
[3H]PAF binding. On the other hand, a 20 nM
concentration near 7-fold of the Kd value (2.9 nM in the wild type) was selected for [3H]WEB
2086 binding, since this was thought to reflect the expression level of
the receptor; differences in Kd values among mutants
were small (data not shown). In each case, the relative specific
binding was expressed as percentages of the specific binding, with that
of the wild type as 100. The ratio between PAF and WEB 2086 binding was
also calculated to represent the relative PAF binding affinity,
compared with that observed with the wild-type receptor. The binding
ratios in Table I indicate that some mutations resulted in an apparent
gain or loss of PAF binding, as characterized by their localization
among seven TM domains. PAF preferentially bound to some mutants such
as N58A, D63A, T69A, N100A, T101A, S104A, and D289A (with ratios over
1.40) in which substituted residues mainly cluster in TM II and III. In
contrast, PAF scarcely bound to other mutants such as H188A, H248A,
H249A, Q252A, Q276A, T278A, and S283A (with ratios under 0.30) among TM
V, VI, and VII domain mutants.
Ligand-binding properties observed in COS-7 cells transiently
expressing mutant PAF receptors
ABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION
EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES
RESULTS
DISCUSSION
FOOTNOTES
Acknowledgments
REFERENCES
-adrenergic receptors has been obtained (16), and this greatly contributes to effective clinical applications. Various PAF receptor antagonists have been developed as antiallergic and antiinflammatory drugs, but little is known of ligand-binding sites in the cloned PAF
receptors. Most GPCR agonists are considered to bind to a hydrophobic
core surrounded by seven-TM
-helices with electrostatic and
hydrophobic force. We designed experiments using alanine-scanning mutagenesis to replace individually all 23 polar amino acids in the
putative TM domains of a guinea pig PAF receptor, the objective being
to define positions involved in the recognition of PAF.
Materials
)2
fragment were purchased from DuPont NEN.
1-O-Hexadecyl-2-O-acetyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (PAF C16),
1-O-octadecyl-2-O-acetyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (PAF C18),
1-O-hexadecyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine
(lyso-PAF C16) were obtained from Cascade Biochem (Reading, United
Kingdom), and
1-O-hexadecyl-2-O-(methylcarbamyl)-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (methylcarbamyl-PAF C16) was from Cayman Chemical (Ann Arbor, MI).
Unlabeled WEB 2086, SM-12502, and BN-50730 were generous gifts from
Boehringer Ingelheim, Sumitomo Pharmaceuticals (Osaka, Japan), and Dr.
N. G. Bazan (Louisiana State University), respectively. CV-6209,
CV-3988, and TCV-309 were kindly donated from Takeda Chemical
Industries (Osaka, Japan). Geneticin and inositol-free Dulbecco's
modified Eagle's medium were purchased from Life Technologies, Inc.
Anti-FLAG M2 monoclonal antibody was from Kodak. All other reagents
were of analytical grade and were from Wako Chemicals (Osaka) or
Sigma.
)
(Stratagene) containing the entire coding region of a guinea pig PAF
receptor cDNA (5). The Transformer Site-Directed Mutagenesis Kit
(Clontech) was used to exchange polar amino acids with alanine. For
construction of epitope-tagged receptors, an 8-amino acid peptide
(FLAG) sequence (DYKDDDDK) was inserted between the N-terminal
initiator methionine and the second amino acid of the wild type and
mutant receptors by polymerase chain reaction, as described (22). The
coding regions of all constructs were sequenced on both strands using
an ABI 373 DNA Sequencer (Perkin Elmer) and were subcloned into the
mammalian expression vectors pcDNA I and pcDNA I Neo
(Invitrogen) for transient expression in COS-7 cells and stable
expression in CHO cells, respectively.
)), fixed for 10 min in 2% freshly
prepared paraformaldehyde in PBS(
), washed twice with PBS(
), and
incubated for 1 h with 20% fetal bovine serum in the Hepes-Tyrode's buffer (FBS-Hepes-Tyrode's buffer) to reduce the nonspecific binding. The cells were incubated for 20 min with/without 10 µg/ml anti-FLAG antibody in FBS-Hepes-Tyrode's buffer. They were
washed three times with PBS(
), incubated for 30 min with 1 µCi/ml
125I-labeled sheep anti-mouse IgG F(ab
)2
fragment in FBS-Hepes-Tyrode buffer, washed three times with PBS(
),
solubilized with 0.1 N NaOH, and subjected to gamma
counting. The anti-FLAG antibody-dependent binding was used
to show the expression levels of the receptors.
) containing 1 mM
EDTA, and after centrifugation, the cells were suspended on ice in
Hepes-Tyrode's-BSA buffer at a density of 4 × 105/ml. An aliquot of 800 µl of cell suspension was
incubated for 15 s with 200 µl of the buffer containing PAF. The
reaction was halted, and the extraction was done using 200 µl of
ice-cold 100% (w/v) trichloroacetic acid. IP3 in the
extract was detected according to the manufacturer's instructions. To
examine the long term (10-min) response, we used a
myo-[3H]inositol labeling method. CHO cells in
12-well dishes were prelabeled with
myo-[3H]inositol (0.2 µCi/well) for 24 h in inositol-free Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium. The cells were
then incubated for 20 min in Hepes-Tyrode's-BSA buffer containing 10 mM LiCl and stimulated by ligands. After the indicated
time, the reaction was terminated by aspirating the supernatant and
adding 500 µl of ice-cold 0.4 M HClO4. After
standing on ice for 20 min, the 400-µl supernatant was neutralized
with 200 µl of 0.72 N KOH/0.6 M
KHCO3. The precipitated material was removed by
centrifugation, and the supernatant was applied to an AG anion exchange
column (1-X8, 200-400 mesh from Dowex). Inositol phosphates (IPs) were
eluted with the stepwise gradients of ammonium formate, as described
(24).
Search for Polar Amino Acids in the Transmembrane Domains Involved
in PAF Binding
Fig. 1.
Structural model of the PAF receptor
indicating the amino acids conserved among four mammalian species.
A, putative seven-transmembrane topology with the conserved
amino acids as closed circles. Guinea pig and human PAF
receptors are composed of 342 amino acids, while rat and mouse
receptors are of 341 amino acids. The bracketed residue is
deleted in the rat and mouse receptors. Potential glycosylation sites,
a palmitoylation site, and a disulfide linkage between two cysteines
are also illustrated. In B, conserved amino acids in TM
I-VII domains are capitalized, and nonconserved ones are
expressed as dashes. Numbers indicate their positions within
the guinea pig receptor. All 23 polar amino acids, individually converted to alanine in this study, are underlined.
[View Larger Version of this Image (34K GIF file)]
TM
Receptor
Relative specific
binding
Binding ratio
PAF
WEB
2086
% of
WT
PAF binding/WEB 2086 binding
WT
100.0
± 4.9
100.0 ± 10.6
1.00
1st
S23A
163.6
± 6.2
164.4 ± 3.0
1.00
N33A
39.3
± 11.4
46.6 ± 2.9
0.84
2nd
N58A
28.8
± 2.4
18.0 ± 13.3
1.60
T60A
172.7
± 11.9
232.6 ± 13.3
0.74
D63A
94.9
± 5.1
48.3 ± 2.9
1.96
T69A
117.7
± 7.6
28.5 ± 1.5
4.14
3rd
N100A
307.3
± 14.1
168.7 ± 11.2
1.82
T101A
240.0
± 5.8
168.8 ± 7.4
1.42
S104A
235.5
± 13.2
113.8 ± 6.2
2.07
T112A
292.8
± 5.2
265.1 ± 11.2
1.10
4th
S138A
211.9
± 11.7
189.4 ± 7.2
1.12
S150A
249.6
± 13.7
230.3 ± 11.5
1.08
5th
H188A
1.3
± 2.1
150.3 ± 9.0
0.01
6th
T236A
197.8
± 12.4
313.8 ± 22.0
0.63
H248A
4.9
± 1.6
101.0 ± 2.7
<0
H249A
12.4
± 3.4
48.7 ± 2.0
0.26
Q252A
61.4
± 5.4
215.7 ± 8.3
0.29
7th
Q276A
1.8
± 3.7
142.5 ± 4.0
0.01
T278A
14.2
± 3.7
258.5 ± 10.6
0.06
S283A
63.6
± 2.7
224.2 ± 10.6
0.28
T284A
286.2
± 17.6
335.0 ± 11.0
0.85
N285A
273.5
± 14.7
244.2 ± 10.2
1.12
D289A
268.8
± 13.3
189.6 ± 7.0
1.42
To accurately estimate the expression levels, N-terminal FLAG-tagged PAF receptors were constructed and analyzed. It was previously demonstrated that the epitope-tagged PAF receptor functions comparably to the nontagged receptor in COS-7 cells (8, 23). The binding parameters were calculated as described above, and the receptor expression levels were quantitated using an anti-FLAG monoclonal antibody (data not shown). The specific PAF binding per FLAG expression revealed that FLAG-tagged mutants showed binding characteristics similar to those of the corresponding nontagged mutants; those of N58A, D63A, N100A, T101A, S104A, T112A, and D289A mutants were higher than that of the tagged wild type, whereas those of H188A, H248A, H249A, Q252A, Q276A, and T278A were lower. The T69A mutant showed the highest binding ratio (4.14) in Table I, but this was due to a decrease of binding affinity to WEB 2086 (data not shown). Consequently, experiments with both types of the receptors identified six mutants (N58A, D63A, N100A, T101A, S104A, and D289A) as high affinity mutants and the other six mutants (H188A, H248A, H249A, Q252A, Q276A, and T278A) as low affinity ones.
Characterization of Ligand-binding Properties of Mutant Receptors in CHO TransformantsTo further characterize mutant receptors, we constructed and cloned CHO transformants stably expressing the nontagged wild type and representative mutant receptors: N100A, T101A, and S104A in high affinity mutants; and H188A, H248A, and Q276A in low affinity mutants. In all transformants, the saturation experiments with [3H]PAF C16 and [3H]WEB 2086 revealed the existence of a single class of binding site noted in the Scatchard plot analysis (data not shown). Each mutation of Asn-100, Thr-101, or Ser-104 caused a 3-fold increase in the PAF binding affinity, and that of His-188, His-248, or Gln-276 resulted in an apparent loss of the PAF binding (Table II). Next, displacements of specific [3H]WEB 2086 binding with different concentrations of various PAF receptor ligands were compared between mutant receptors (Fig. 2). Two natural agonists (PAF C16 and PAF C18) displaced [3H]WEB 2086 at lower concentrations in high affinity mutants and at higher concentrations in low affinity mutants than at those in the wild-type receptor (Fig. 2, A and B). Methylcarbamyl-PAF C16, a synthetic analog of PAF resistant to PAF acetylhydrolases, displaced in a similar manner as seen with PAF C16 and PAF C18 (Fig. 2C), indicating that the altered binding profiles among mutants were not caused by the enzyme activities. Lyso-PAF C16, an inactive derivative of PAF, displaced only in the two highest affinity mutants, N100A and S104A (Fig. 2D). In contrast, binding affinities of two structurally distinct receptor antagonists, WEB 2086 and CV-6209, were almost indistinguishable between the wild type and mutants (Fig. 2, E and F). Similar results were obtained using other PAF receptor antagonists such as BN-50730, SM-12502, CV-3988, and TCV-309 (data not shown).
|
Signal Transduction via Mutant Receptors in CHO Transformants
To elucidate functional properties of mutant
receptors, signal transduction in CHO transformants was investigated
(Fig. 3). First, PAF-induced arachidonate release was
measured; it was time dependent within 15 min (data not shown) and dose
dependent (Fig. 3A). The dose-dependent
responses during a 6-min incubation in high affinity mutants displayed
patterns similar to that observed in the wild type, even though the
release was more prominent at higher concentrations. In contrast, the
dose-dependent curves in low affinity mutants were shifted
right by 2 log units from that in the wild type. Low affinity mutants
did not respond to low concentrations of PAF below 1 nM.
Next, PAF-induced IP3 production in 15 s was measured
(Fig. 3B). IP3 rapidly increased after exposure to 100 nM PAF, reached a maximum in 15 s, declined
quickly, and returned to the basal level in 1 min in CHO cells
expressing the wild-type receptor (data not shown). Maximum
IP3 production levels were comparable between
transformants, and the activities were expressed as percent responses.
The dose-dependent curves in high affinity mutants were
almost indistinguishable from that of the wild type, whereas those in
low affinity mutants were shifted right by 1 order of magnitude.
Finally, PAF-dependent inhibition of forskolin-induced cAMP
accumulation was determined (Fig. 3C). Maximum effects of
PAF differed between transformants reflecting different expression
levels of the receptors as shown in Table II, and the activities were
expressed as percentage responses. The dose-dependent
profiles in these mutants were basically the same seen for the
arachidonate release or the IP3 production. Parental CHO
cells showed no response, regardless of the signals tested (data not
shown). Lyso-PAF induced arachidonate release in a
dose-dependent manner only in the N100A and S104A
transformants (Fig. 3D). Lyso-PAF also elicited
IP3 production and inhibited forskolin-activated adenylyl
cyclase in these transformants (data not shown).
The basal arachidonate release in the N100A transformant was twice as
large as those of other transformants (Fig. 3, A and D). To determine whether the N100A mutant would be
constitutively active, the effects of antagonist WEB 2086 on basal
activities in arachidonate release, inositol phosphate (IPs)
production, and adenylyl cyclase inhibition were examined (Fig.
4). Micromolar concentrations of WEB 2086 greatly
reduced the basal arachidonate release in the N100A transformant, but
not in the wild type (Fig. 4A). Because the basal amounts of
IP3 were too minute to assess quantitatively,
myo-[3H]inositol labeling was done to detect
any constitutive activation in phosphatidylinositol hydrolysis. The
radioactivity of IPs (IP1 + IP2 + IP3) in the N100A transformant was five times as large as
that in the wild-type transformant. This phenomenon was also observed
in COS-7 cells transfected with the N100A mutant but not with the
wild-type receptor (data not shown). Further, IPs production decreased
slightly but significantly after a 10-min exposure to WEB 2086 in the
N100A transformant (Fig. 4B). WEB 2086 augmented
forskolin-induced cAMP accumulation in the N100A but not in the
wild-type transformant, indicating that adenylyl cyclase was inhibited
in the steady state in the N100A transformant, and this inhibition was
released by WEB 2086 (Fig. 4C). Thus, the N100A mutant
proved to be a constitutively active receptor.
Possible Involvement of the Transmembrane Histidines in Zinc Binding to the PAF Receptor
Some reports indicated that zinc ions
preferentially inhibit PAF binding and PAF-evoked cellular responses in
rabbit and human platelets (20, 21). We attempted to elucidate
involvement in zinc binding of two histidines (His-188 and His-248) in
TM V and VI domains, highly characteristic to the PAF receptors. First,
the effects of various naturally occurring divalent cations on specific
[3H]PAF binding to the wild-type receptor were examined
in CHO cells (Fig. 5A). Zinc as well as
copper and cadmium effectively inhibited specific PAF binding at
mM concentrations. Calcium but not magnesium or iron showed
a slight inhibition. Because specific [3H]WEB 2086 binding was also inhibited by zinc, the effects of zinc on WEB 2086 binding were compared between the wild-type and low affinity mutants
(Fig. 5B). Even though the Kd values of
[3H]WEB 2086 binding in H188A and H248A mutants were
higher than that of the wild type (Table II), higher concentrations of
zinc were needed to inhibit specific WEB 2086 binding in these mutants. Thus, His-188 and His-248 were assumed to be involved in zinc binding.
Molecular Modeling of the Transmembrane Domains of the PAF Receptor
Construction of a three-dimensional model of the TM
domains of the guinea pig PAF receptor was based on the following
criteria. 1) Hydropathicity analysis with the Kyte-Doolittle parameters (29) was used to define regions in the PAF receptor as putative TM
domains. 2) A model for the structure of bacteriorhodopsin based on
high resolution electron cryomicroscopy (25) was used as a template to
position the 7 TM domains. 3) The TM -helices were oriented so that
polar residues highly conserved between GPCRs and which we found to be
important for high affinity PAF binding would face the central cleft of
the receptor, as observed in GPCRs. 4) PAF C16 was situated to the
position similar to that of retinal in bacteriorhodopsin. 5) Energy
minimization was carried out for PAF and the side chains of the PAF
receptor with the main chains fixed. According to this putative
molecular model, PAF C16 penetrates through the central cleft of the
receptor in an oblique direction across the plasma membrane (Fig.
6). The phosphate moiety in a PAF molecule is surrounded
by three histidines (His-188, His-248, and His-249) in TM V and VI.
Positively charged nitrogen atoms in imidazole rings of each histidine
are oriented toward negatively charged oxygen atoms of the phosphate
group of PAF, all within 2.5-3.5 Å. His-248, which is essential for
high affinity PAF binding (Tables I and II), is situated as a wedge
between the oxygen atom in the phosphate group and the carbonyl oxygen atom in the acetyl moiety of PAF. These three histidines can coordinate a zinc ion. Gln-252 exists near and interacts with His-248. The polar
residues, the alanine exchanges of which generated high affinity
mutants, are mostly positioned to surround the long alkyl chain of PAF
(pink color in Fig. 6). The polar residues for which exchanges did not
result in apparent changes of PAF binding are all located at a distance
over the van der Waals contacts from PAF.
GPCRs are integral membrane proteins characterized by hydrophobic seven-TM segments, despite a wide heterogeneity of their ligand structures. Site-directed mutagenesis and molecular modeling studies of GPCRs have contributed to a better understanding of the ligand-receptor interaction, and domains that are likely involved in the ligand recognition have been identified in some GPCRs (17, 30). We investigated PAF-PAF receptor interactions with alanine-scanning mutagenesis and molecular modeling of a guinea pig PAF receptor.
Mutations Altered PAF-binding Affinity in Transfected COS-7 CellsFrom previous extensive studies of structure-activity relationships using various PAF analogs, the polarity in a PAF molecule seems to be crucial for its biological activities, as reviewed (31). In its glycerol-backboned structure, PAF has an alkyl-ether linkage at the sn-1 position, an acetyl moiety at sn-2, and the phosphocholine residue with both positive and negative charges at sn-3, which are all important for its biological activities and receptor binding. PAF receptor homologs of four mammalian species show a high identity (72.5%) in the deduced amino acid sequences (Fig. 1A). The identity in the putative TM I, II, III, VI, and VII domains are especially high (90.5%) compared with that of other portions. All 23 polar amino acids clustered in the putative seven TM regions are perfectly conserved, including not only residues highly conserved between members of the GPCR superfamily such as Asp-63 and Asn-285 (32), but also highly characteristic residues such as the three histidines in TM V and VI domains (Fig. 1B). We reasoned that electrostatic interactions between PAF and these polar residues are likely to be important for binding and selected these residues as targets of alanine substitution.
An alanine-scanning search was carried out using both nontagged and FLAG-tagged receptors, and similar results were obtained concerning ligand-binding properties. Mutations of N58A, D63A, N100A, T101A, S104A, and D289A generated high affinity mutants, as determined both by the binding ratio and the specific PAF binding per FLAG expression (data not shown). The results agree well with the finding that mutations of Asp-63 (D63N) and Asp-289 (D289A) in the human PAF receptor augmented PAF binding affinity (33, 34). Mutants of N100A, T101A, and S104A were chosen for further analysis, because PAF binding affinities of these mutants were much higher than that of D289A and the expression levels of the receptors were more constant than those of N58A and D63A. On the other hand, mutations of H188A, H248A, H249A, Q252A, Q276A, and T278A impaired PAF binding, indicating that these six residues may be involved in direct or indirect physical interactions with PAF. Mutants of H188A, H248A, and Q276A were selected, because PAF binding affinities of these mutants were much lower than those of others.
Ligand-binding Profiles and Functional Properties of Mutant Receptors in CHO TransformantsThe CHO transformants showed essentially similar characteristics in PAF binding to those of transfected COS-7 cells (Table II). In ligand displacement experiments (Fig. 2), high and low affinity mutants exhibited largely altered affinities only for agonists, but much less for six distinct antagonists. Next, signal transduction via mutant receptors was examined. In all signals tested, dose-dependent curves in high affinity mutants were similar to those for the wild-type receptor, whereas those in low affinity mutants were all shifted right by 1 or 2 log units (Fig. 3). Although PAF-induced IP3 production and inhibition of adenylyl cyclase are mediated by different types (pertussis toxin insensitive and sensitive, respectively) of G proteins (14), both of the dose-dependent responses were affected in the same manner by receptor mutations. One of the highest affinity mutants, N100A, was constitutively active and was responsive to lyso-PAF (Figs. 3D and 4). In contrast, three low affinity mutants were practically inactive with 1 nM PAF, but with higher concentrations their responses were observed.
According to the two-state model of GPCR activation, receptors exist in an equilibration between the two conformational states, the inactive (R) and the active (R*) (19). In the resting state, the equilibrium is largely shifted to R, and the amounts of R* are under a threshold to trigger a productive receptor-G protein coupling in the absence of agonists. Agonists bind to R* with a higher affinity than to R and shift the equilibrium to R* by stabilizing it, which in turn activates G proteins and transmits the intracellular signals. In contrast, neutral antagonists do not distinguish the two states, bind to the both states of the receptor with the same affinity, and do not shift the equilibrium. In our experiments, the equilibrium might be shifted to R* in high affinity mutants (N100A, T101A, and S104A), and to R in low affinity mutants (H188A, H248A, and Q276A), compared with that in the wild type. Previous studies have indicated that mutations in ligand-binding sites, G protein-coupling domains, and intracellular C-terminal tails of various GPCRs confer constitutive activity on receptors (35-38). It was recently described that mutations in the third intracellular loop speculated as a G protein-coupling domain of the human PAF receptor generated also both constitutively active and inactive mutants (38). Some of the constitutively active receptors were accompanied by increased affinities for agonists but not for antagonists (17, 36, 38). In the N100A mutant, the equilibrium might be overshifted to R* enough to generate a constitutive activation. Lyso-PAF seems to bind efficiently only to the active state of the PAF receptor.
Molecular Modeling of the Transmembrane Domains of the PAF ReceptorNo member of the GPCR family has been subject to x-ray
crystallography, but diffraction data of bacteriorhodopsin (25) provide structural information that may apply to GPCRs. Although
bacteriorhodopsin is a light-driven proton pump but not a GPCR, it has
a structure with hydrophobic seven-TM -helices. Bovine and frog
rhodopsins have been analyzed at a low resolution (6-9 Å) also by
electron cryomicroscopy (39, 40), but information on the receptor
structure is yet limited.
Because zinc ions inhibited ligand binding to the PAF receptor (Fig.
5), TM V and VI domains were aligned so that the three histidine
residues (His-188, His-248, and His-249) should adjoin and form a
zinc-binding pocket. Zinc is an essential component of many catalytic
enzymes and transcription factors, all of which contain homologous
domains involving zinc-binding sites (41). A consensus sequence
consisting of three contiguous histidines has been observed among
zinc-binding proteins such as carbonic anhydrases. Recently, it was
reported that artificial introduction of three histidines into
appropriate positions among seven-TM segments of the tachykinin NK-1
receptor and the -opioid receptor gave rise to high affinity
zinc-binding sites (42, 43). IC50 of zinc was 1 mM in the wild-type receptor (Fig. 5A), a value higher than that in human platelets (21) but comparable with that in
rat Kupffer cells (44). Divalent cations of zinc, copper, and cadmium
but not iron inhibited specific PAF binding, indicating that
coordination numbers might be four but not six. These three histidines
and a water molecule may occupy the four coordination sites of a zinc
ion with a distorted tetrahedron geometry (41). Even though the
physiological importance of zinc in PAF-mediated signal transduction
in vivo is not obvious, our findings support the idea that
these three histidines would interact with a zinc ion as well as the
phosphate group of a PAF molecule.
In this putative model, the long alkyl chain of PAF and polar side residues in Asp-63, Asn-100, Ser-104, and Asp-289 are within the van der Waals contacts and are repulsive in hydrophobic interactions. The alanine exchange of these residues may increase the hydrophobic interactions causing increased affinity for PAF. The three histidines, His-188, His-248, and His-249, seem to be involved directly in PAF binding, and Gln-252 might associate with His-248 and stabilize the conformation of His-248. The roles of Asn-58, Thr-101, Gln-276, and Thr-278 in PAF binding remain to be clarified. However, mutations of these residues distant from the ligand-binding site may cause the steric effects.
ConclusionWe obtained evidence that alanine exchanges of polar amino acids in the putative TM domains of the PAF receptor generated both constitutively active and inactive mutants. Natural mutations of various GPCRs cause serious diseases because of their constitutive activity or inactivity (45-47). Overexpression of the PAF receptor in transgenic mice elicited abnormal reproduction, bronchial hyperreactivity, increased endotoxin-induced lethality, and tumorigenesis in skin (48). Further, deficiency of plasma PAF acetylhydrolase was associated with severe respiratory symptoms in asthmatic children (49, 50). These studies indicate that an excess of PAF receptor signaling causes various disorders. It is, therefore, intriguing to screen the natural mutations of the PAF receptor in allergic and inflammatory diseases. In addition, our studies have made available a systematic approach to screen inverse agonists of PAF receptor, using these high and low affinity mutant receptors. Inverse agonists are expected to be more effective drugs than neutral antagonists for diseases in which PAF is involved. Finally, our molecular model would aid in predicting PAF-PAF receptor interactions for a rational drug design, even though a better understanding of the interactions awaits physicochemical analysis of the receptor structure.
We thank Dr. K. Kume (The University of Tokyo) and other laboratory members (The University of Tokyo and RIKEN) for valuable discussions and M. Ohara for critical reading of the manuscript.