Agonist-bound structure of the human P2Y12 receptor

  • Jin Zhang
  • , Kaihua Zhang
  • , Zhan Guo Gao
  • , Silvia Paoletta
  • , Dandan Zhang
  • , Gye Won Han
  • , Tingting Li
  • , Limin Ma
  • , Wenru Zhang
  • , Christa E. Müller
  • , Huaiyu Yang
  • , Hualiang Jiang
  • , Vadim Cherezov
  • , Vsevolod Katritch
  • , Kenneth A. Jacobson
  • , Raymond C. Stevens
  • , Beili Wu*
  • , Qiang Zhao
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

291 Scopus citations

Abstract

The P2Y 12 receptor (P2Y 12R), one of eight members of the P2YR family expressed in humans, is one of the most prominent clinical drug targets for inhibition of platelet aggregation. Although mutagenesis and modelling studies of the P2Y 12R provided useful insights into ligand binding, the agonist and antagonist recognition and function at the P2Y 12R remain poorly understood at the molecular level. Here we report the structures of the human P2Y 12R in complex with the full agonist 2-methylthio-adenosine-5′ -diphosphate (2MeSADP, a close analogue of endogenous agonist ADP) at 2.5 Å resolution, and the corresponding ATP derivative 2-methylthio-adenosine-5′ -triphosphate (2MeSATP) at 3.1 Å resolution. These structures, together with the structure of the P2Y 12R with antagonist ethyl 6-(4-((benzylsulfonyl)carbamoyl)piperidin- 1-yl)-5-cyano-2-methylnicotinate (AZD1283), reveal striking conformational changes between nucleotide and non-nucleotide ligand complexes in the extracellular regions. Further analysis of these changes provides insight into a distinct ligand binding landscape in the δ -group of class A G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). Agonist and non-nucleotide antagonist adopt different orientations in the P2Y 12R, with only partially overlapped binding pockets. The agonist-bound P2Y 12R structure answers long-standing questions surrounding P2Y 12R-agonist recognition, and reveals interactions with several residues that had not been reported to be involved in agonist binding. As a first example, to our knowledge, of a GPCR in which agonist access to the binding pocket requires large-scale rearrangements in the highly malleable extracellular region, the structural and docking studies will therefore provide invaluable insight into the pharmacology and mechanisms of action of agonists and different classes of antagonists for the P2Y 12R and potentially for other closely related P2YRs.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)119-122
Number of pages4
JournalNature
Volume508
Issue number7498
DOIs
StatePublished - 2014
Externally publishedYes

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