Determination of the melanocortin-4 receptor structure identifies Ca2+ as a cofactor for ligand binding.
Jing YuLuis E GimenezCiria C HernandezYiran WuAriel H WeinGye Won HanKyle McClarySanraj R MittalKylie BurdsallBenjamin StauchLi-Jie WuSophia N StevensAlys PeisleySavannah Y WilliamsValerie ChenGlenn L MillhauserSuwen ZhaoRoger D ConeRaymond C StevensPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
The melanocortin-4 receptor (MC4R) is involved in energy homeostasis and is an important drug target for syndromic obesity. We report the structure of the antagonist SHU9119-bound human MC4R at 2.8-angstrom resolution. Ca2+ is identified as a cofactor that is complexed with residues from both the receptor and peptide ligand. Extracellular Ca2+ increases the affinity and potency of the endogenous agonist α-melanocyte-stimulating hormone at the MC4R by 37- and 600-fold, respectively. The ability of the MC4R crystallized construct to couple to ion channel Kir7.1, while lacking cyclic adenosine monophosphate stimulation, highlights a heterotrimeric GTP-binding protein (G protein)-independent mechanism for this signaling modality. MC4R is revealed as a structurally divergent G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR), with more similarity to lipidic GPCRs than to the homologous peptidic GPCRs.