PLoS Computational Biology (Apr 2020)

Molecular mechanisms of fentanyl mediated β-arrestin biased signaling.

  • Parker W de Waal,
  • Jingjing Shi,
  • Erli You,
  • Xiaoxi Wang,
  • Karsten Melcher,
  • Yi Jiang,
  • H Eric Xu,
  • Bradley M Dickson

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pcbi.1007394
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 4
p. e1007394

Abstract

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The development of novel analgesics with improved safety profiles to combat the opioid epidemic represents a central question to G protein coupled receptor structural biology and pharmacology: What chemical features dictate G protein or β-arrestin signaling? Here we use adaptively biased molecular dynamics simulations to determine how fentanyl, a potent β-arrestin biased agonist, binds the μ-opioid receptor (μOR). The resulting fentanyl-bound pose provides rational insight into a wealth of historical structure-activity-relationship on its chemical scaffold. Following an in-silico derived hypothesis we found that fentanyl and the synthetic opioid peptide DAMGO require M153 to induce β-arrestin coupling, while M153 was dispensable for G protein coupling. We propose and validate an activation mechanism where the n-aniline ring of fentanyl mediates μOR β-arrestin through a novel M153 "microswitch" by synthesizing fentanyl-based derivatives that exhibit complete, clinically desirable, G protein biased coupling. Together, these results provide molecular insight into fentanyl mediated β-arrestin biased signaling and a rational framework for further optimization of fentanyl-based analgesics with improved safety profiles.