Artigo Acesso aberto Revisado por pares

Structural Determinants for Agonist Binding Affinity to Thromboxane/Prostaglandin Endoperoxide (TP) Receptors

1997; Elsevier BV; Volume: 272; Issue: 19 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1074/jbc.272.19.12399

ISSN

1083-351X

Autores

Gerald W. Dorn, Michael G. Davis, Drew D. D’Angelo,

Tópico(s)

Receptor Mechanisms and Signaling

Resumo

The two most extensively characterized thromboxane/prostaglandin endoperoxide (TP) receptors, from human platelets and rat vascular smooth muscle, exhibit thromboxane agonist [15-(1α,2β(5Z),3α-(1E,3S),4α)]-7-[3-hydroxy-4-(p-iodophenoxy)-1-butenyl-7-oxabicycloheptenoic acid (I-BOP) binding affinities that differ by an order of magnitude, rat TP having the higher affinity. We utilized this difference in I-BOP affinity to identify structural determinants of TP receptor heterogeneity. No significant difference was found in the rank order of affinities for a series of thromboxane receptor ligands to bind to cloned human TPα versus rat TP, indicating that these represent species homologs, not distinct TP subtypes. Structural determinants for observed differences in I-BOP bindingKd were localized by creating chimeric human/rat TP followed by mutational substitution of specific critical amino acids. Initially, seven chimeric receptors with splice sites in transmembranes 1, 2, 4, or 7 were constructed and expressed in HEK293 cells for analysis of ligand binding properties. Substitution of any part except the carboxyl tail of the human TP into the rat TP resulted in a receptor with I-BOP binding affinity intermediate between the two. Analysis of chimeras in which only the extracellular amino terminus and a portion of transmembrane 1 were switched localized the determinant of high affinity binding to the region between amino acids 3 and 40. Using this chimera, amino acids in the human portion (extracellular amino terminus and part of transmembrane 1) were replaced with analogous amino acids from rat TP to regain high affinity I-BOP binding. Only when amino acid Val37 and either Val36 or Ala40 were reverted to their respective rat TP counterparts (Ala36, Leu37, and Gly40, respectively) was high affinity I-BOP binding recovered. The mechanism for the increased I-BOP affinity may be the lengthening of the amino acid side chain at position 37, thus extending this group further into the putative I-BOP binding pocket, with compensatory shortening of side chains in spatially adjacent amino acids. The two most extensively characterized thromboxane/prostaglandin endoperoxide (TP) receptors, from human platelets and rat vascular smooth muscle, exhibit thromboxane agonist [15-(1α,2β(5Z),3α-(1E,3S),4α)]-7-[3-hydroxy-4-(p-iodophenoxy)-1-butenyl-7-oxabicycloheptenoic acid (I-BOP) binding affinities that differ by an order of magnitude, rat TP having the higher affinity. We utilized this difference in I-BOP affinity to identify structural determinants of TP receptor heterogeneity. No significant difference was found in the rank order of affinities for a series of thromboxane receptor ligands to bind to cloned human TPα versus rat TP, indicating that these represent species homologs, not distinct TP subtypes. Structural determinants for observed differences in I-BOP bindingKd were localized by creating chimeric human/rat TP followed by mutational substitution of specific critical amino acids. Initially, seven chimeric receptors with splice sites in transmembranes 1, 2, 4, or 7 were constructed and expressed in HEK293 cells for analysis of ligand binding properties. Substitution of any part except the carboxyl tail of the human TP into the rat TP resulted in a receptor with I-BOP binding affinity intermediate between the two. Analysis of chimeras in which only the extracellular amino terminus and a portion of transmembrane 1 were switched localized the determinant of high affinity binding to the region between amino acids 3 and 40. Using this chimera, amino acids in the human portion (extracellular amino terminus and part of transmembrane 1) were replaced with analogous amino acids from rat TP to regain high affinity I-BOP binding. Only when amino acid Val37 and either Val36 or Ala40 were reverted to their respective rat TP counterparts (Ala36, Leu37, and Gly40, respectively) was high affinity I-BOP binding recovered. The mechanism for the increased I-BOP affinity may be the lengthening of the amino acid side chain at position 37, thus extending this group further into the putative I-BOP binding pocket, with compensatory shortening of side chains in spatially adjacent amino acids. Thromboxane A2 is one of the most potent platelet-aggregating and vasoconstricting agents known. High affinity interactions of thromboxane A2 or prostaglandin H2 (1Mayeux P.R. Morton E.H. Gillard J. Lord A. Morinelli T.A. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 1988; 157: 733-739Crossref PubMed Scopus (57) Google Scholar, 2Saussy Jr., D.L. Mais D.E. Burch R.M. Halushka P.V. J. Biol. Chem. 1986; 261: 3025-3029Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar) and lower affinity interactions of prostaglandin F2α, and E2 (3Dorn G.W., II Becker M.W. Davis M.G. J. Biol. Chem. 1992; 267: 24897-24905Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar) at membrane thromboxane/prostaglandin endoperoxide (TP) 1The abbreviations used are: TP, thromboxane/prostaglandin endoperoxide; I-BOP, [15-(1α,2β(5Z),3α-(1E,3S),4α)]-7-[3-hydroxy-4-(piodophenoxy)-1-butenyl-7-oxabicycloheptenoic acid; bp, base pair. receptors transduce these effects in platelets and vascular smooth muscle. To date, two human TP subtypes as well as mouse and rat TP have been cloned (4Hirata M. Hayashi Y. Ushikubi F. Yokota Y. Kageyama R. Nakanishi S. Narumiya S. Nature. 1991; 349: 617-620Crossref PubMed Scopus (623) Google Scholar, 5Raychowdhury M.K. Yukawa M. Collins L.J. McGrail S.H. Kent K.C. Ware J.A. J. Biol. Chem. 1994; 269: 19256-19261Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar, 6Namba T. Sugimoto Y. Hirata M. Hayashi Y. Honda A. Watabe A. Negishi M. Ichikawa A. Narumiya S. Biochem. Biophys. Res. Commun. 1992; 184: 1197-1203Crossref PubMed Scopus (138) Google Scholar, 7D'Angelo D.D. Terasawa T. Carlisle S.J. Dorn G.W., II Lynch K.R. Prostaglandins. 1996; 52: 303-316Crossref PubMed Scopus (13) Google Scholar, 8Abe T. Takeuchi K. Takahashi N. Tsutsumi E. Taniyama Y. Abe K. J. Clin. Invest. 1995; 96: 654-657Crossref Scopus (86) Google Scholar). The two human subtypes, designated TPα and TPβ, are the alternately spliced products of a single gene, diverge only in the intracellular carboxyl terminus, and display identical ligand binding characteristics but different patterns of coupling to G-protein effectors (9Hirata T. Ushikubi F. Kakizuka A. Okuma M. Narumiya S. J. Clin. Invest. 1996; 97: 949-956Crossref PubMed Scopus (261) Google Scholar). The cloned rat and mouse TP are 93% identical at the amino acid level, while, compared with the human TPα, the rat TP is 73% identical. Several laboratories have compared the ligand binding characteristics of human platelet and rat vascular TP and have found that the rat receptor exhibits unique pharmacology exemplified by a binding affinity for the agonist 125I-BOP, which is 10-fold greater than human TP (3Dorn G.W., II Becker M.W. Davis M.G. J. Biol. Chem. 1992; 267: 24897-24905Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar, 10Masuda A. Mais D.E. Oatis J.E. Halushka P.V. Biochem. Pharmacol. 1991; 42: 537-544Crossref PubMed Scopus (43) Google Scholar, 11Folger W.H. Halushka P.V. Wilcox C.S. Guzman N.J. Eur. J. Pharmacol. 1992; 9: 71-78Crossref Scopus (18) Google Scholar, 12Paul R.V. Saxenhofer H. Wackyman P.S. Halushka P.V. Am. J. Physiol. 1996; 270: F31-F38Crossref PubMed Google Scholar). A comparative study of transfected human TPα and rat TP has confirmed these findings (7D'Angelo D.D. Terasawa T. Carlisle S.J. Dorn G.W., II Lynch K.R. Prostaglandins. 1996; 52: 303-316Crossref PubMed Scopus (13) Google Scholar). There is a great deal of interest in identifying the structural determinants of thromboxane receptor ligand binding due to the potential for development and refinement of subtype-specific agonists and antagonists. To date, two studies have employed mutagenesis to examine the effects of single amino acid substitutions on ligand binding. Funk et al. (13Funk C.D. Furci L. Moran N. Fitzgerald G.A. Mol. Pharmacol. 1993; 44: 934-939PubMed Google Scholar) modified several amino acids within the seventh transmembrane-spanning domain of human TPα and characterized changes in antagonist binding. However, since the amino acids in transmembrane domain 7 are absolutely conserved in all known TP receptors, these studies do not help to define differences between the naturally occurring receptors. In the second study, our laboratory examined the functional consequences of substitution mutagenesis of cysteine residues within human TPα and identified three cysteines that affected ligand binding (14D'Angelo D.D. Eubank J.J. Davis M.G. Dorn G.W., II. J. Biol. Chem. 1996; 271: 6233-6240Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (57) Google Scholar). Cysteines 105 and 184, in the first and second extracellular loops, respectively, were absolutely required for binding and were assumed to form an intramolecular disulfide bond. Cysteine 102, in the first extracellular loop, was found to contribute to optimal binding, although the nature of its interaction with ligand was not defined. Because ligand binding affinity is probably determined by multiple contiguous or widely separated amino acid residues, complete identification of the ligand binding pocket is not likely to be accomplished by substitution mutagenesis of single amino acids. A better approach may be to exchange regions between related receptors, and then measure gain or loss of binding affinity related to the particular exchanged domain. In the current study, this approach was employed to identify regions in TP receptors conferring species-specific differences in 125I-BOP binding affinity. Analysis of chimeras was followed by site-directed mutagenesis of single and combined nonconserved amino acids in the region of interest. Our results indicate that multiple regions of TP receptors, including the first transmembrane-spanning domain, are necessary for high affinity 125I-BOP binding. Within the first transmembrane domain, a combination of Leu37 with either Ala36 or Gly40 is necessary to produce a high affinity receptor. Restriction enzymes were obtained from Life Technologies, Inc. Taq polymerase (Perkin-Elmer) was employed in polymerase chain reaction construction of mutant receptors. Site-directed mutagenesis was performed using the Altered Sites kit from Promega. All radionucleotides were purchased from DuPont NEN. DNA Sequenase II kits were from U.S. Biolabs. 125I-BOP and125I-PTA-OH were synthesized as described previously (15Dorn G.W., II J. Clin. Invest. 1989; 84: 1883-1891Crossref PubMed Scopus (68) Google Scholar) using precursors generously provided by Dr. Perry Halushka (Charleston, SC). SQ29548, I-SAP, and nonradioactive I-BOP were purchased from Cayman. All tissue culture reagents and Lipofectamine were from Life Technologies, Inc. Oligodeoxynucleotides were synthesized and purified at the University of Cincinnati Core DNA Facility. All other reagents were of the highest purity available from Sigma or Fisher. Human K562 TPα (16D'Angelo D.D. Davis M.G. Ali S. Dorn G.W., II J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 1994; 271: 1034-1041PubMed Google Scholar) and rat TP (7D'Angelo D.D. Terasawa T. Carlisle S.J. Dorn G.W., II Lynch K.R. Prostaglandins. 1996; 52: 303-316Crossref PubMed Scopus (13) Google Scholar) cDNAs were used to construct the chimeric receptors in this study. TP chimeras were engineered by combining rat and human TP cDNAs at common existing restriction sites or at silent restriction sites created by mutagenic substitution of one or two nucleotides as described in TableI. All splice sites used were in one of the transmembrane-spanning domains. Therefore, the chimeric receptor nomenclature employed reflects the transmembrane domain of the splice site. The initial designation, R or H, is the species of origin (rat or human) of the amino terminus of the receptor, followed by a numeral describing the transmembrane domain wherein the two receptors were joined. The splice site is indicated by a slash, and a letter designating the species of origin of the carboxyl portion of the receptor follows.Table IMutagenesis protocol for insertion of silent restriction sitesChimeraEnzymeHuman TPαRat TPRestriction siteMutagenesisRestriction siteMutagenesisTP R7/HXhoIIbp 902Nonebp 893NoneTP R1/H and TP H1/RBstXIbp 129Nonebp 129NoneTP R2/H and TP H2/RBstEIIbp 237T243 → C, creation of BstEII sitebp 234NoneTP R4/H and TP H4/RNotIbp 473Nonebp 470G470 → C and G476 → C, creation of NotI siteChimeric receptors were constructed using restriction sites at analogous positions in the human and rat TP cDNAs. Restriction enzyme and splice site positions are indicated. As necessary, silent restriction sites were introduced as indicated to facilitate construction of TP chimeras. Open table in a new tab Chimeric receptors were constructed using restriction sites at analogous positions in the human and rat TP cDNAs. Restriction enzyme and splice site positions are indicated. As necessary, silent restriction sites were introduced as indicated to facilitate construction of TP chimeras. The mutagenesis protocol for insertion of silent restriction sites is described in Table I, and the approximate location of the sites is depicted in Fig. 1. Oligonucleotides encoding specific mutations included 10 nucleotides flanking each side of the mutation and were employed for mutagenesis exactly as described previously (14D'Angelo D.D. Eubank J.J. Davis M.G. Dorn G.W., II. J. Biol. Chem. 1996; 271: 6233-6240Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (57) Google Scholar). All mutations were confirmed by DNA sequencing, and all chimeric receptors were constructed by three-way ligation into the expression vector pcDNA3. Receptor chimeras were confirmed by DNA sequencing. Mutant/chimeric receptors, in which specific individual or groups of amino acids within the human fragment of a chimeric receptor were mutated back to their rat analogs, were constructed using polymerase chain reaction and antisense or sense strand primers encoding the mutations. All PCR-generated mutations were confirmed by double-stranded DNA sequencing using Sequenase. Wild type human TPα and rat TP were stably expressed in HEK293 cells as described previously (14D'Angelo D.D. Eubank J.J. Davis M.G. Dorn G.W., II. J. Biol. Chem. 1996; 271: 6233-6240Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (57) Google Scholar, 16D'Angelo D.D. Davis M.G. Ali S. Dorn G.W., II J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 1994; 271: 1034-1041PubMed Google Scholar). Recombinant receptors were transiently transfected in HEK293 cells using calcium phosphate precipitation. Nontransfected HEK293 cells have no thromboxane receptor expression defined by the absence of specific binding of 125I-BOP and the absence of calcium signaling with U46619 (16D'Angelo D.D. Davis M.G. Ali S. Dorn G.W., II J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 1994; 271: 1034-1041PubMed Google Scholar). Cells were prepared for equilibrium binding of 125I-BOP and competition with nonradioactive thromboxane analogs using methods we have previously reported (16D'Angelo D.D. Davis M.G. Ali S. Dorn G.W., II J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 1994; 271: 1034-1041PubMed Google Scholar). Binding competition experiments were computer-fitted to nonlinear models using the LIGAND program (17Munson P.J. Rodbard D. Anal. Biochem. 1980; 107: 220-239Crossref PubMed Scopus (7772) Google Scholar), and the following parameters were derived: Kd(dissociation constant), Bmax (maximal binding capacity), and nonspecific binding. In competition binding using different structural analogs of thromboxane or prostaglandin endoperoxides, Ki values were generated from IC50 values using the Cheng-Prusoff equation (18Cheng Y. Prusoff W.H. Biochem. Pharmacol. 1973; 22: 3099-3108Crossref PubMed Scopus (12330) Google Scholar). All binding studies fit best to a single binding site model. Data are reported as mean ± S.E. Comparisons of binding constants were by unpaired t test (two receptors) or by one-way analysis of variance (multiple receptors), and individual means were compared by the Bonferroni procedure using Sigma Stat software. Comparisons between the rank order binding affinities for various thromboxane analogs were performed using a Spearman rank order correlation test. Statistical significance was assumed at p < 0.05. It has been recognized for some time that there are species-specific differences in ligand binding to thromboxane receptors (19Dorn G.W., II Am. J. Physiol. 1991; 261: R145-R153PubMed Google Scholar). Of particular interest is the observation that rat TP exhibit an approximately 10-fold higher affinity for the TP agonist I-BOP than human TPα (3Dorn G.W., II Becker M.W. Davis M.G. J. Biol. Chem. 1992; 267: 24897-24905Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar, 7D'Angelo D.D. Terasawa T. Carlisle S.J. Dorn G.W., II Lynch K.R. Prostaglandins. 1996; 52: 303-316Crossref PubMed Scopus (13) Google Scholar). Fig. 1 compares the amino acid sequence of these two TP receptors. Wild type rat TP bound 125I-BOP with a 7-fold higher affinity than did human TPα expressed in the same cell line using the same expression vector (Table II and Fig.2 A). Thus, differences in ligand binding are unlikely to be attributable to variations in cellular milieu. TheKi values for several stable thromboxane or endoperoxide analogs possessing either agonist or antagonist activity at thromboxane receptors are compared for transfected rat and human TP in Table II. Of the nine compounds tested, significant differences in affinity were observed in five, including the antagonist SQ29548 (Fig.2 B). Interestingly, and despite the structural similarity of the two compounds, rat TP exhibited higher affinity for I-BOP but lower affinity for SQ29548 (Table II). The rank order of binding affinity for these nine compounds in human and rat TP was highly correlated (correlation coefficient = 0.916, p < 0.001).Table IIComparison of ligand binding affinities for human TPα and rat TPTPαRankRat TPRankp valueKiaFor I-BOP, Kd andBmax values are given.KiaFor I-BOP, Kd andBmax values are given.AgonistsI-BOP4.0 ± 0.5 nm (8)20.6 ± 0.07 nm (8)10.001157,516 ± 19,266 sites/cell124,499 ± 13,022 sites/cellU4661960 ± 3.7 nm (6)541 ± 6 nm (6)40.257U4406977 ± 7 nm (6)677 ± 11 nm (6)60.339CTA2284 ± 31 nm (8)783 ± 4 nm (6)60.001AntagonistsSQ2954813 ± 2 nm (13)334 ± 4 nm (15)40.004I-PTA-0H300 ± 34 nm (8)7365 ± 17 nm (8)80.319I-SAP0.44 ± 0.05 nm (6)10.34 ± 0.1 nm (6)10.53113-APA50 ± 3.3 μm (6)937 ± 2.6 μm (6)90.014PTA227 ± 1.7 nm (6)414 ± 1 nm (6)30.001All values were calculated from [125I]BOP competition binding experiments. I-BOP Kd andBmax values were determined using nonlinear models in LIGAND program. Ki values were derived from IC50 values using the Cheng-Prusoff equation (18Cheng Y. Prusoff W.H. Biochem. Pharmacol. 1973; 22: 3099-3108Crossref PubMed Scopus (12330) Google Scholar). Data are presented as means of duplicate determinations ± S.E. for nexperiments per compound. Ranks of binding affinity are reported, as are values comparing binding constant of each compound for human and rat TP. Agonists I-BOP and CTA2 and antagonists SQ29548 and PTA2 were the only compounds that exhibited significant differences in binding affinities for human and rat TP.a For I-BOP, Kd andBmax values are given. Open table in a new tab All values were calculated from [125I]BOP competition binding experiments. I-BOP Kd andBmax values were determined using nonlinear models in LIGAND program. Ki values were derived from IC50 values using the Cheng-Prusoff equation (18Cheng Y. Prusoff W.H. Biochem. Pharmacol. 1973; 22: 3099-3108Crossref PubMed Scopus (12330) Google Scholar). Data are presented as means of duplicate determinations ± S.E. for nexperiments per compound. Ranks of binding affinity are reported, as are values comparing binding constant of each compound for human and rat TP. Agonists I-BOP and CTA2 and antagonists SQ29548 and PTA2 were the only compounds that exhibited significant differences in binding affinities for human and rat TP. Since the above studies demonstrated significant differences between rat TP and human TPα binding affinity for I-BOP and SQ29548, we reasoned that identification of structural determinants of species-specific ligand binding could be achieved by substitution of human TPα regions in rat TP. A series of rat/human TP chimeras was created by ligating appropriate cDNA fragments as depicted in Table I. The initial group of receptors that underwent characterization of ligand binding properties consisted of nine receptors: seven chimeras and the two wild type receptors. Mirror image chimeras were constructed having splice sites in transmembrane-spanning domains one, two, and four, and a rat/human TP chimera was constructed with a splice site in the seventh transmembrane domain. (It should be noted that transmembrane domain 7 is absolutely conserved in these receptors; thus, R7/H exchanges only the intracellular carboxyl terminus; see Fig. 1). All of the receptors studied, including wild type, chimeric, and mutant/chimeras (see below), showed levels of expression in excess of 125,000 receptors/cell. Each receptor was characterized using the radiolabeled agonist 125I-BOP, since preliminary binding studies to transfected rat TP and human TPα using the antagonist 125I-PTA-OH showed insufficient displaceable binding for meaningful analysis. I-BOP binding was characterized after transient expression of the TP chimeras in HEK293 cells and is summarized in Table III. The most interesting finding was that substitution of any segment of human TP for the analogous portion of rat TP, except the intracellular carboxyl terminus (TP R7/H), changed high affinity 125I-BOP binding to an intermediate affinity statistically distinct from that of either of the wild-type receptors. High affinity I-BOP binding was lost even with substitution of only the extracellular amino terminus and a portion of the first transmembrane-spanning region (TP H1/R). This result indicates that one or more domains between amino acids 3 and 40 (inclusive) of rat TP is necessary for high affinity125I-BOP binding. The additional observation that TP R4/H exhibited intermediate affinity for I-BOP but that TP R7/H exhibited high I-BOP affinity shows that, at a minimum, some portion of transmembrane domains 4–6 is also necessary for high affinity interactions with 125I-BOP.Table IIILigand binding characteristics of human/rat TP ChimerasReceptorI-BOPKdSQ29548 KinmnmTPα4.0 ± 0.5 (8)ap < 0.05 compared with Rat TP.13 ± 2 (13)Rat TP0.6 ± 0.07 (8)bp < 0.05 compared with TPα.34 ± 4 (15)TP H1/R1.9 ± 0.3 (7)ap < 0.05 compared with Rat TP.,bp < 0.05 compared with TPα.98 ± 11 (5)TP R1/H1.9 ± 0.4 (5)ap < 0.05 compared with Rat TP.,bp < 0.05 compared with TPα.54 ± 4 (5)TP H2/R2.6 ± 0.3 (5)ap < 0.05 compared with Rat TP.,bp < 0.05 compared with TPα.52 ± 9 (3)TP R2/H1.6 ± 0.1 (5)ap < 0.05 compared with Rat TP.,bp < 0.05 compared with TPα.60 ± 7 (5)TP H4/R2.0 ± 0.2 (6)ap < 0.05 compared with Rat TP.,bp < 0.05 compared with TPα.37 ± 4 (5)TP R4/H2.1 ± 0.5 (5)ap < 0.05 compared with Rat TP.,bp < 0.05 compared with TPα.21 ± 2 (5)TP R7/H0.3 ± 0.02 (6)3-bp < 0.05 compared with TPα.32 ± 4 (5)All values were calculated from [125I]BOP competition binding experiments as described in the Table II legend. Data are means of duplicate determinations ± S.E. for n experiments per compound.a p < 0.05 compared with Rat TP.b p < 0.05 compared with TPα. Open table in a new tab All values were calculated from [125I]BOP competition binding experiments as described in the Table II legend. Data are means of duplicate determinations ± S.E. for n experiments per compound. To assess whether TP structural features necessary for high affinity I-BOP and SQ29548 interactions were shared, the I-BOPKd and SQ29548 Ki for wild-type and chimeric TP were compared. As shown in Fig. 3, there was no correlation, indicating that the determinants of (agonist) I-BOP and (antagonist) SQ29548 binding affinity differ substantially despite the structural similarity in these two compounds (see Fig. 2). This analysis did however, support the statistical grouping of I-BOP binding into high, intermediate, and low affinity groups. The above studies assayed TP chimeras for decreased 125I-BOP binding affinity to localize regions of rat TP that were important determinants of high affinity ligand interactions. Based on the surprising finding that TP H1/R had diminished I-BOP affinity compared with rat TP and our conclusion that amino acids within rat TP amino-terminal/first transmembrane-spanning region must confer high affinity for 125I-BOP, we employed PCR mutagenesis to replace groups of human amino acids in this region of TP H1/R with their rat counterparts. In this manner, a series of mutant/chimeric TP receptors with transmembrane domains 2–7 of the rat receptor and transmembrane domain 1 of the human receptor was created. Select mutations then reverted distinct nonhomologous amino acids in the first transmembrane domain to the rat counterparts. It was anticipated that replacement of functionally important amino acids with their rat analogs would, in the context of TP H1/R, restore125I-BOP binding characteristics to those of wild type rat TP. Initially, the four divergent amino-terminal amino acids were substituted en bloc, as were the three divergent amino acids within the first transmembrane domain. As depicted in Fig.4, replacement of the extracellular domain amino acids with their rat counterparts had no effect on 125I-BOP binding, whereas replacement of the transmembrane amino acids rescued high affinity I-BOP binding. Since this indicated that amino acid(s) at position 36, 37, and/or 40 was necessary for high I-BOP affinity, each of these amino acids was individually replaced with the rat analog, again in the context of TP H1/R. Surprisingly, none of these individual amino acid substitutions was sufficient to rescue high affinity binding for 125I-BOP (Fig. 4). Therefore, to examine the possibility that two of these residues interacted cooperatively to confer high affinity for 125I-BOP, amino acids 36, 37, and 40 were mutated to their rat analogs in all three possible pairs. As depicted in Fig. 4, the combination of Leu37 with either Ala36 or Gly40 rescued high affinity I-BOP binding, whereas the combination of Ala36 and Gly40, like individual replacement of any of the three amino acids, did not. Purely as a matter of thoroughness, the binding affinity for SQ29548 was also determined for each of the TP mutant/chimeras. Consistent with our prior observation that the determinants of I-BOP and SQ29548 binding differ in these receptors, there was again no apparent correlation between SQ29548 and I-BOP binding affinities (data not shown). This study identifies cooperative interactions between pairs of amino acids in the rat TP first transmembrane-spanning domain that contribute to species selectivity in TP agonist binding. Leu37, paired with either Ala36 or Gly40 increased affinity for the agonist I-BOP but not the structurally related antagonist SQ29548. Furthermore, additional residues in transmembrane domain 4, 5, or 6 were implicated as also contributing to the high affinity I-BOP binding exhibited by wild-type rat TP. The experimental design employed herein took advantage of species-specific differences in ligand binding between rat and human TP. Previous reports (3Dorn G.W., II Becker M.W. Davis M.G. J. Biol. Chem. 1992; 267: 24897-24905Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar, 10Masuda A. Mais D.E. Oatis J.E. Halushka P.V. Biochem. Pharmacol. 1991; 42: 537-544Crossref PubMed Scopus (43) Google Scholar, 11Folger W.H. Halushka P.V. Wilcox C.S. Guzman N.J. Eur. J. Pharmacol. 1992; 9: 71-78Crossref Scopus (18) Google Scholar, 12Paul R.V. Saxenhofer H. Wackyman P.S. Halushka P.V. Am. J. Physiol. 1996; 270: F31-F38Crossref PubMed Google Scholar) have demonstrated higher affinity of rat platelet and/or vascular smooth muscle TP receptors for I-BOP compared with the human aggregation-coupled TP receptor. Recently, D'Angelo et al. (7D'Angelo D.D. Terasawa T. Carlisle S.J. Dorn G.W., II Lynch K.R. Prostaglandins. 1996; 52: 303-316Crossref PubMed Scopus (13) Google Scholar) directly compared the binding affinities of transfected human TPα and rat TP and found that, when transiently expressed in identical cell systems using identical expression vectors, rat and human TP differ in their affinity for I-BOP. The current study provides a mechanism that explains these observations. A comparative analysis of the binding affinities of nine thromboxane/endoperoxide analogs (four agonists and five antagonists) in HEK293 cells stably expressing the rat or human TP showed significant differences in the absolute binding affinities of five of the nine compounds. The rank order of ligand binding affinity, however, did not significantly differ between the rat and human TP. Thus, based on the current binding studies in transfected cells, on previously demonstrated similarities in cell signaling (3Dorn G.W., II Becker M.W. Davis M.G. J. Biol. Chem. 1992; 267: 24897-24905Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar, 7D'Angelo D.D. Terasawa T. Carlisle S.J. Dorn G.W., II Lynch K.R. Prostaglandins. 1996; 52: 303-316Crossref PubMed Scopus (13) Google Scholar, 15Dorn G.W., II J. Clin. Invest. 1989; 84: 1883-1891Crossref PubMed Scopus (68) Google Scholar, 16D'Angelo D.D. Davis M.G. Ali S. Dorn G.W., II J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 1994; 271: 1034-1041PubMed Google Scholar), and on the high percentage of shared amino acids between rat and human TP, these two receptors should most appropriately be considered as species variants of a single pharmacologic subtype. The similarities in rat TP and human TPα facilitated identification of ligand binding determinants using analysis of chimeric receptors. A general weakness in mutagenic structure-function analysis is differentiating between functional changes conferred by the characteristics of an individual amino acid from more general alterations in protein folding and tertiary structure. Substitution of portions of one receptor with another that is similar was anticipated to alter amino acids without changing the overall structure of the receptor. This approach was employed to analyze binding properties of various rat/human TP chimeras and demonstrated the following: 1) the intracellular carboxyl terminus of TP receptors does not play a regulatory role for I-BOP binding affinity, since chimera TP R7/H exhibited high affinity for I-BOP; 2) multiple receptor domains contribute to the high I-BOP binding affinity exhibited by wild-type rat TP. The latter conclusion derives from comparison of the binding properties of the six mirror-image chimeras constructed by ligating human and rat TP receptors within transmembrane domains 1, 2, and 4. Each of these chimeric receptors displayed an intermediate binding affinity for I-BOP. En bloc replacement of rat TP receptor transmembrane domains 4, 5, and 6 (but not 7; see TP R7/H) with the human counterparts or replacement of the extracellular amino terminus and the first transmembrane domains (TP H1/R) lowered the I-BOP binding dissociation constant from approximately 0.6 nm to 2 nm. Thus, a minimum of at least two separate regions of TP receptors are required for high affinity interactions with I-BOP. Interestingly, the determinants of I-BOP and SQ29648 binding differ, since no correlation was observed in the binding affinities of these two compounds to the wild-type and chimeric TP receptors. Since the first transmembrane domain is not generally recognized as a region of critical importance in ligand binding to G-protein-coupled receptors, we focused our efforts toward identifying individual amino acid determinants in this region. While the chimeric analysis assayed for "loss of function" (high affinity I-BOP binding), we utilized the TP H1/R chimera as the substrate for grouped or single amino acid mutagenesis with the goal of "rescuing" high affinity I-BOP binding. The most intriguing findings of this study relate to the requirement for cooperative interactions between Leu37 and Ala36 or Gly40 in the first transmembrane domain to restore high I-BOP binding affinity. A postulated mechanism whereby substitution of Val37 → Leu plus either Val36 → Ala or Ala40 → Gly increases I-BOP binding affinity in the TP H1/R chimera is illustrated in Fig.5. The shared substitution, that of Val37→ Leu, simply lengthens the side chain of amino acid 37 by a single carbon, extending the isopropyl group further into the putative binding pocket, thereby potentially facilitating interactions with I-BOP. The necessary co-substitutions have opposite effects, diminishing the size of the side chain of an adjoining amino acid (position 36 is continuous with position 37, and position 40 is one additional revolution of the α-helix), thus making room for the larger Leu37 side chain. This space-filling mechanism is supported by several observations: 1) each of the amino acids in positions 36, 37, and 40 of either receptor possesses a noncharged hydrophobic side chain, thus eliminating charge as a factor; 2) each of the two pairs of amino acid substitutions that restores high affinity binding involves the amino acid at position 37 and a spatially adjacent amino acid; 3) The required alteration in either substitution pair is an increase in length of the side chain of amino acid 37 with a compensatory shortening of the side chain of an adjacent amino acid. Unfortunately, these data do not identify the portion of the ligand interacting with these receptor domains. Regional variations in the degree of amino acid conservation between human and rat TP are illustrated in Fig. 1. The seventh transmembrane domain is absolutely conserved between these receptors and has previously been demonstrated to play a critical role in TP ligand binding (13Funk C.D. Furci L. Moran N. Fitzgerald G.A. Mol. Pharmacol. 1993; 44: 934-939PubMed Google Scholar). Interestingly, two of the three nonconserved amino acids in the first transmembrane domain were found to be necessary for species-specific high affinity I-BOP binding exhibited by rat TP. In contrast to these highly conserved regions of the receptor, the intracellular carboxyl terminus is hypervariable and did not affect ligand binding. This degree of variability may occur either because this region is not a critical determinant of receptor structure-function and therefore can accommodate frequent mutations or because this region is responsible for observed species differences in these receptors. To date, two forms of human TP receptors have been identified using molecular techniques, and these receptors differ only in their intracellular carboxyl terminus (5Raychowdhury M.K. Yukawa M. Collins L.J. McGrail S.H. Kent K.C. Ware J.A. J. Biol. Chem. 1994; 269: 19256-19261Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar). The ligand binding properties of these two human TP receptors are identical. Furthermore, our laboratory has engineered a mutant human TP receptor lacking an intracellular carboxyl terminus by introducing a termination codon at amino acid position 320 and found that this truncated receptor has normal human TP binding properties with only mild impairment of calcium signal transduction. 2G. Dorn, unpublished results. Thus, several different avenues of investigation support the notion that the hypervariable carboxyl terminus is not directly involved in ligand binding to TP receptors The current findings, together with a prior mutagenesis analysis of the seventh transmembrane domain of human TPα (13Funk C.D. Furci L. Moran N. Fitzgerald G.A. Mol. Pharmacol. 1993; 44: 934-939PubMed Google Scholar) and studies of other G-protein coupled receptors that bind small molecules (20Fraser C.M. J. Biol. Chem. 1989; 264: 9266-9270Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar, 21Tucker A.L. Robeva A.S. Taylor H.E. Holeton D. Bockner M. Lynch K.R. Linden J. J. Biol. Chem. 1994; 269: 27900-27906Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar, 22Wess J. Maggio R. Palmer J.R. Vogel Z. J. Biol. Chem. 1992; 267: 19313-19319Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar, 23Rivkees S.A. Lasbury M.E. Barbhaiya H. J. Biol. Chem. 1995; 270: 20485-20490Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (34) Google Scholar) suggest that the binding site for thromboxane and endoperoxides resides within the hydrophobic transmembrane-spanning domains. Particular importance has been assigned to transmembrane domains 1 and 7 in determining ligand specificity and binding affinity (current study and Ref. 13Funk C.D. Furci L. Moran N. Fitzgerald G.A. Mol. Pharmacol. 1993; 44: 934-939PubMed Google Scholar). However, some studies have also suggested that residues within the first and second extracellular loop may influence ligand binding to TP receptors, perhaps by determining peptide folding and receptor conformation (14D'Angelo D.D. Eubank J.J. Davis M.G. Dorn G.W., II. J. Biol. Chem. 1996; 271: 6233-6240Abstract Full Text Full Text PDF PubMed Scopus (57) Google Scholar, 24Mayeux P.R. Morinelli T.A. Williams T.C. Hazard E.S. Mais D.E. Oatis J.E. Baron D.A. Halushka P.V. J. Biol. Chem. 1991; 266: 13752-13758Abstract Full Text PDF PubMed Google Scholar, 25Schror K. Davis-Bruno K. Halushka P.V. Biochem. Pharmacol. 1995; 49: 921-927Crossref PubMed Scopus (7) Google Scholar). Furthermore, Halushka and colleagues (26Allan C.J. Higashiura K. Martin M. Morinelli T.A. Kurtz D.T. Geoffroy O. Meier G.P. Gettys T.W. Halushka P.V. J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 1996; 277: 1132-1139PubMed Google Scholar) have recently reported that TPα interactions with different G-protein effectors can modify receptor affinity for I-BOP. Because the binding domain for TP ligands is not well defined and even the orientation of thromboxane with different receptor regions is a matter of speculation, future studies will be needed to address these issues.

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