Login / Signup

A Single Amino Acid Determines the Selectivity and Efficacy of Selective Negative Allosteric Modulators of CaV1.3 L-Type Calcium Channels.

Garry CooperSoosung KangTamara Perez-RoselloJaime N GuzmanDaniel GaltieriZhong XieJyothisri KondapalliJack MordellRichard B SilvermanD James Surmeier
Published in: ACS chemical biology (2020)
Ca2+ channels with a CaV1.3 pore-forming α1 subunit have been implicated in both neurodegenerative and neuropsychiatric disorders, motivating the development of selective and potent inhibitors of CaV1.3 versus CaV1.2 channels, the calcium channels implicated in hypertensive disorders. We have previously identified pyrimidine-2,4,6-triones (PYTs) that preferentially inhibit CaV1.3 channels, but the structural determinants of their interaction with the channel have not been identified, impeding their development into drugs. By a combination of biochemical, computational, and molecular biological approaches, it was found that PYTs bind to the dihydropyridine (DHP) binding pocket of the CaV1.3 subunit, establishing them as negative allosteric modulators of channel gating. Site-directed mutagenesis, based on homology models of CaV1.3 and CaV1.2 channels, revealed that a single amino acid residue within the DHP binding pocket (M1078) is responsible for the selectivity of PYTs for CaV1.3 over CaV1.2. In addition to providing direction for chemical optimization, these results suggest that, like dihydropyridines, PYTs have pharmacological features that could make them of broad clinical utility.
Keyphrases
  • small molecule
  • amino acid
  • blood pressure
  • crispr cas
  • single cell
  • protein kinase
  • binding protein