Nature Communications (Dec 2023)

Design and structural validation of peptide–drug conjugate ligands of the kappa-opioid receptor

  • Edin Muratspahić,
  • Kristine Deibler,
  • Jianming Han,
  • Nataša Tomašević,
  • Kirtikumar B. Jadhav,
  • Aina-Leonor Olivé-Marti,
  • Nadine Hochrainer,
  • Roland Hellinger,
  • Johannes Koehbach,
  • Jonathan F. Fay,
  • Mohammad Homaidur Rahman,
  • Lamees Hegazy,
  • Timothy W. Craven,
  • Balazs R. Varga,
  • Gaurav Bhardwaj,
  • Kevin Appourchaux,
  • Susruta Majumdar,
  • Markus Muttenthaler,
  • Parisa Hosseinzadeh,
  • David J. Craik,
  • Mariana Spetea,
  • Tao Che,
  • David Baker,
  • Christian W. Gruber

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-023-43718-w
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 17

Abstract

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Abstract Despite the increasing number of GPCR structures and recent advances in peptide design, the development of efficient technologies allowing rational design of high-affinity peptide ligands for single GPCRs remains an unmet challenge. Here, we develop a computational approach for designing conjugates of lariat-shaped macrocyclized peptides and a small molecule opioid ligand. We demonstrate its feasibility by discovering chemical scaffolds for the kappa-opioid receptor (KOR) with desired pharmacological activities. The designed De Novo Cyclic Peptide (DNCP)-β-naloxamine (NalA) exhibit in vitro potent mixed KOR agonism/mu-opioid receptor (MOR) antagonism, nanomolar binding affinity, selectivity, and efficacy bias at KOR. Proof-of-concept in vivo efficacy studies demonstrate that DNCP-β-NalA(1) induces a potent KOR-mediated antinociception in male mice. The high-resolution cryo-EM structure (2.6 Å) of the DNCP-β-NalA–KOR–Gi1 complex and molecular dynamics simulations are harnessed to validate the computational design model. This reveals a network of residues in ECL2/3 and TM6/7 controlling the intrinsic efficacy of KOR. In general, our computational de novo platform overcomes extensive lead optimization encountered in ultra-large library docking and virtual small molecule screening campaigns and offers innovation for GPCR ligand discovery. This may drive the development of next-generation therapeutics for medical applications such as pain conditions.