Structural insights into the activation of metabotropic glutamate receptors

A Koehl, H Hu, D Feng, B Sun, Y Zhang, MJ Robertson… - Nature, 2019 - nature.com
A Koehl, H Hu, D Feng, B Sun, Y Zhang, MJ Robertson, M Chu, TS Kobilka, T Laeremans…
Nature, 2019nature.com
Metabotropic glutamate receptors are family C G-protein-coupled receptors. They form
obligate dimers and possess extracellular ligand-binding Venus flytrap domains, which are
linked by cysteine-rich domains to their 7-transmembrane domains. Spectroscopic studies
show that signalling is a dynamic process, in which large-scale conformational changes
underlie the transmission of signals from the extracellular Venus flytraps to the G protein-
coupling domains—the 7-transmembrane domains—in the membrane. Here, using a …
Abstract
Metabotropic glutamate receptors are family C G-protein-coupled receptors. They form obligate dimers and possess extracellular ligand-binding Venus flytrap domains, which are linked by cysteine-rich domains to their 7-transmembrane domains. Spectroscopic studies show that signalling is a dynamic process, in which large-scale conformational changes underlie the transmission of signals from the extracellular Venus flytraps to the G protein-coupling domains—the 7-transmembrane domains—in the membrane. Here, using a combination of X-ray crystallography, cryo-electron microscopy and signalling studies, we present a structural framework for the activation mechanism of metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 5. Our results show that agonist binding at the Venus flytraps leads to a compaction of the intersubunit dimer interface, thereby bringing the cysteine-rich domains into close proximity. Interactions between the cysteine-rich domains and the second extracellular loops of the receptor enable the rigid-body repositioning of the 7-transmembrane domains, which come into contact with each other to initiate signalling.
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