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  • Orphan receptor ligand discovery by pickpocketing pharmacological neighbors.

Orphan receptor ligand discovery by pickpocketing pharmacological neighbors.

Nature chemical biology (2016-12-20)
Tony Ngo, Andrey V Ilatovskiy, Alastair G Stewart, James L J Coleman, Fiona M McRobb, R Peter Riek, Robert M Graham, Ruben Abagyan, Irina Kufareva, Nicola J Smith
ABSTRACT

Understanding the pharmacological similarity of G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) is paramount for predicting ligand off-target effects, drug repurposing, and ligand discovery for orphan receptors. Phylogenetic relationships do not always correctly capture pharmacological similarity. Previous family-wide attempts to define pharmacological relationships were based on three-dimensional structures and/or known receptor-ligand pairings, both unavailable for orphan GPCRs. Here, we present GPCR-CoINPocket, a novel contact-informed neighboring pocket metric of GPCR binding-site similarity that is informed by patterns of ligand-residue interactions observed in crystallographically characterized GPCRs. GPCR-CoINPocket is applicable to receptors with unknown structure or ligands and accurately captures known pharmacological relationships between GPCRs, even those undetected by phylogeny. When applied to orphan receptor GPR37L1, GPCR-CoINPocket identified its pharmacological neighbors, and transfer of their pharmacology aided in discovery of the first surrogate ligands for this orphan with a 30% success rate. Although primarily designed for GPCRs, the method is easily transferable to other protein families.