A single residue (Arg46) located within the N-terminus of the V1a vasopressin receptor is critical for binding vasopressin but not peptide or non-peptide antagonists

Stuart Hawtin, Rosemary Parslow, John Simms, Mark Wheatley

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

25 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

A fundamental issue in molecular endocrinology is to define how agonist: receptor interaction differs from antagonist:receptor interaction. The vasopressin V,e receptor (V1aR) is a member of a subfamily of related G protein-coupled receptors that are activated by the hormone AVP or related peptides. The N-terminus of the V1aR has recently been shown to be critical for binding agonists but not antagonists. Using a combination of N-terminally truncated constructs and alanine-scanning mutagenesis, individual residues that provide these agonist-specific binding epitopes have now been identified in this study. Our data establish that a single residue, Arg(46), is critical for AVP binding to the V-1a A Systematic substitution revealed that Arg was required at this locus and could not be substituted by Lys, Glu, Leu, or Ala. in contrast, antagonist binding (cyclic or linear, peptide or nonpeptide) was unaffected. Disruption of Arg(46) also resulted in defective intracellular signaling. Arginine is conserved at this locus in all members of the neurohypophysial peptide hormone receptor family cloned to date, indicative of a fundamental role in receptor function. In addition to Arg46, the residues Leu(42), Gly(43), Asp(45) form a patch contributing to AVID binding. This study provides molecular insight into the role of the V1aR N-terminus and key differences between agonist and antagonist binding requirements.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)600-609
Number of pages10
JournalMolecular Endocrinology
Volume16
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2002

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