Small-molecule positive allosteric modulation of homomeric kainate receptors GluK1-3: development of screening assays and insight into GluK3 structure

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The kainate receptors GluK1-3 (glutamate receptor ionotropic, kainate receptors 1–3) belong to the family of ionotropic glutamate receptors and are essential for fast excitatory neurotransmission in the brain, and are associated with neurological and psychiatric diseases. How these receptors can be modulated by small-molecule agents is not well understood, especially for GluK3. We show that the positive allosteric modulator BPAM344 can be used to establish robust calcium-sensitive fluorescence-based assays to test agonists, antagonists, and positive allosteric modulators of GluK1-3. The half-maximal effective concentration (EC50) of BPAM344 for potentiating the response of 100 μm kainate was determined to be 26.3 μm for GluK1, 75.4 μm for GluK2, and 639 μm for GluK3. Domoate was found to be a potent agonist for GluK1 and GluK2, with an EC50 of 0.77 and 1.33 μm, respectively, upon co-application of 150 μm BPAM344. At GluK3, domoate acts as a very weak agonist or antagonist with a half-maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50) of 14.5 μm, in presence of 500 μm BPAM344 and 100 μm kainate for competition binding. Using H523A-mutated GluK3, we determined the first dimeric structure of the ligand-binding domain by X-ray crystallography, allowing location of BPAM344, as well as zinc-, sodium-, and chloride-ion binding sites at the dimer interface. Molecular dynamics simulations support the stability of the ion sites as well as the involvement of Asp761, Asp790, and Glu797 in the binding of zinc ions. Using electron microscopy, we show that, in presence of glutamate and BPAM344, full-length GluK3 adopts a dimer-of-dimers arrangement.

OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftFEBS Journal
Vol/bind291
Udgave nummer7
Sider (fra-til)1506-1529
ISSN1742-464X
DOI
StatusUdgivet - 2024

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
Heidi Nielsen and Heidi Peterson are thanked for their technical support. We thank Dr C. Mulle (University of Bordeaux, France) for providing plasmids. We acknowledge the MAX lab (now MAX IV Laboratory) for time on Beamline 911‐3 under Proposal MX20130012 and thank beamline scientists for their support. Research conducted at MAX IV, a Swedish national user facility, is supported by the Swedish Research council under contract 2018‐07152, the Swedish Governmental Agency for Innovation Systems under contract 2018‐04969, and Formas under contract 2019‐02496. We acknowledge the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility for provision of synchrotron radiation facilities, and we would like to thank beamline scientists for assistance in using beamline ID23eh2 (project no. mx1691). We acknowledge Diamond Light Source for time on Beamline I03 under Proposal mx11011‐1 and the support from beamline scientists. We thank the ARCHER U.K. National Supercomputing Services for computer time granted via the High‐End Computing Consortium for Biomolecular Simulation, HECBioSim ( http://www.hecbiosim.ac.uk ), supported by EPSRC (EP/029407/1) (MM, PCB). Research funding is acknowledged by The Lundbeck foundation (RV, SMF, and JSK), The Independent Research Fund Denmark—Medical Sciences (YB, RV, TST, and JSK), Danscatt (RV, TST, MG, and JSK), BioStructX (RV, TST, MG, and JSK), and The Alfred Benzon Foundation (MM).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Federation of European Biochemical Societies.

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