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Structural determinants of a conserved enantiomer-selective carvone binding pocket in the human odorant receptor OR1A1
Authors:Christiane Geithe  Jonas Protze  Franziska Kreuchwig  Gerd Krause  Dietmar Krautwurst
Institution:1.Deutsche Forschungsanstalt für Lebensmittelchemie Leibniz Institut (DFA),Freising,Germany;2.Leibniz-Forschungsinstitut für Molekulare Pharmakologie (FMP),Berlin,Germany;3.Max-Delbrück-Centrum für Molekulare Medizin (MDC),Berlin,Germany
Abstract:Chirality is a common phenomenon within odorants. Most pairs of enantiomers show only moderate differences in odor quality. One example for enantiomers that are easily discriminated by their odor quality is the carvones: humans significantly distinguish between the spearmint-like (R)-(?)-carvone and caraway-like (S)-(+)-carvone enantiomers. Moreover, for the (R)-(?)-carvone, an anosmia is observed in about 8% of the population, suggesting enantioselective odorant receptors (ORs). With only about 15% de-orphaned human ORs, the lack of OR crystal structures, and few comprehensive studies combining in silico and experimental approaches to elucidate structure–function relations of ORs, knowledge on cognate odorant/OR interactions is still sparse. An adjusted homology modeling approach considering OR-specific proline-caused conformations, odorant docking studies, single-nucleotide polymorphism (SNP) analysis, site-directed mutagenesis, and subsequent functional studies with recombinant ORs in a cell-based, real-time luminescence assay revealed 11 amino acid positions to constitute an enantioselective binding pocket necessary for a carvone function in human OR1A1 and murine Olfr43, respectively. Here, we identified enantioselective molecular determinants in both ORs that discriminate between minty and caraway odor. Comparison with orthologs from 36 mammalian species demonstrated a hominid-specific carvone binding pocket with about 100% conservation. Moreover, we identified loss-of-function SNPs associated with the carvone binding pocket of OR1A1. Given carvone enantiomer-specific receptor activation patterns including OR1A1, our data suggest OR1A1 as a candidate receptor for constituting a carvone enantioselective phenotype, which may help to explain mechanisms underlying a (R)-(?)-carvone-specific anosmia in humans.
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