A Small Contribution to a Large System: The Leptin Receptor Complex.
Jennifer M SimienGrace E OrellanaHoa T N PhanYao HuEmily A KurthChristine RufFranz KricekQian WangAlan V SmrckaEllinor HaglundPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2023)
Obesity is a classified epidemic, increasing the risk of secondary diseases such as diabetes, inflammation, cardiovascular disease, and cancer. The pleiotropic hormone leptin is the proposed link for the gut-brain axis controlling nutritional status and energy expenditure. Research into leptin signaling provides great promise toward discovering therapeutics for obesity and its related diseases targeting leptin and its cognate leptin receptor (LEP-R). The molecular basis underlying the human leptin receptor complex assembly remains obscure, due to the lack of structural information regarding the biologically active complex. In this work, we investigate the proposed receptor binding sites in human leptin utilizing designed antagonist proteins combined with AlphaFold predictions. Our results show that binding site I has a more intricate role in the active signaling complex than previously described. We hypothesize that the hydrophobic patch in this region engages a third receptor forming a higher-order complex, or a new LEP-R binding site inducing allosteric rearrangement.
Keyphrases
- cardiovascular disease
- type diabetes
- endothelial cells
- metabolic syndrome
- insulin resistance
- weight loss
- small molecule
- binding protein
- squamous cell carcinoma
- body mass index
- machine learning
- pluripotent stem cells
- young adults
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- drug delivery
- cardiovascular events
- heat shock
- cerebral ischemia
- resting state
- heat stress
- functional connectivity
- aqueous solution