An alternate binding site for PPARγ ligands

PPARγ is a target for insulin-sensitizing drugs such as glitazones, which improve plasma glucose maintenance in patients with diabetes. Synthetic ligands have been designed to mimic endogenous ligand binding to a canonical ligand-binding pocket to hyperactivate PPARγ. Here we reveal that synthetic P...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature communications 2014-04, Vol.5 (1), p.3571-3571, Article 3571
Hauptverfasser: Hughes, Travis S., Giri, Pankaj Kumar, de Vera, Ian Mitchelle S., Marciano, David P., Kuruvilla, Dana S., Shin, Youseung, Blayo, Anne-Laure, Kamenecka, Theodore M., Burris, Thomas P., Griffin, Patrick R., Kojetin, Douglas J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:PPARγ is a target for insulin-sensitizing drugs such as glitazones, which improve plasma glucose maintenance in patients with diabetes. Synthetic ligands have been designed to mimic endogenous ligand binding to a canonical ligand-binding pocket to hyperactivate PPARγ. Here we reveal that synthetic PPARγ ligands also bind to an alternate site, leading to unique receptor conformational changes that impact coregulator binding, transactivation and target gene expression. Using structure–function studies we show that alternate site binding occurs at pharmacologically relevant ligand concentrations, and is neither blocked by covalently bound synthetic antagonists nor by endogenous ligands indicating non-overlapping binding with the canonical pocket. Alternate site binding likely contributes to PPARγ hyperactivation in vivo , perhaps explaining why PPARγ full and partial or weak agonists display similar adverse effects. These findings expand our understanding of PPARγ activation by ligands and suggest that allosteric modulators could be designed to fine tune PPARγ activity without competing with endogenous ligands. The nuclear receptor PPARγ regulates insulin sensitivity and is the molecular target of anti-diabetic drugs. Here, Hughes et al . show demonstrate binding of synthetic PPARγ agonists to a previously unknown binding site within PPARγ and show this affects structure and function of the receptor.
ISSN:2041-1723
2041-1723
DOI:10.1038/ncomms4571