4.5 Article

Reengineering the ligand sensitivity of the broadly tuned human bitter taste receptor TAS2R14

Journal

BIOCHIMICA ET BIOPHYSICA ACTA-GENERAL SUBJECTS
Volume 1862, Issue 10, Pages 2162-2173

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.bbagen.2018.07.009

Keywords

Structure-function relationship; Calcium imaging; Molecular modeling; In vitro mutagenesis; G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR); Bitter taste receptor

Funding

  1. German Research Foundation (DFG) [ME1024/8-1]
  2. ISF-NSFC grant [2463]

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Background: In humans, bitterness perception is mediated by similar to 25 bitter taste receptors present in the oral cavity. Among these receptors three, TAS2R10, TAS2R14 and TAS2R46, exhibit extraordinary wide agonist profiles and hence contribute disproportionally high to the perception of bitterness. Perhaps the most broadly tuned receptor is the TAS2R14, which may represent, because of its prominent expression in extraoral tissues, a receptor of particular importance for the physiological actions of bitter compounds beyond taste. Methods: To investigate how the architecture and composition of the TAS2R14 binding pocket enables specific interactions with a complex array of chemically diverse bitter agonists, we carried out homology modeling and ligand docking experiments, subjected the receptor to point-mutagenesis of binding site residues and performed functional calcium mobilization assays. Results: In total, 40 point-mutated receptor constructs were generated to investigate the contribution of 19 positions presumably located in the receptor's binding pocket to activation by 7 different TAS2R14 agonists. All investigated positions exhibited moderate to pronounced agonist selectivity. Conclusions: Since numerous modifications of the TAS2R14 binding pocket resulted in improved responses to individual agonists, we conclude that this bitter taste receptor might represent a suitable template for the engineering of the agonist profile of a chemoreceptive receptor. General significance: The detailed structure-function analysis of the highly promiscuous and widely expressed TAS2R14 suggests that this receptor must be considered as potentially frequent target for known and novel drugs including undesired off-effects.

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