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Design and Nuclear Magnetic Resonance (NMR) Structure Determination of the Second Extracellular Immunoglobulin Tyrosine Kinase A (TrkAIg2) Domain Construct for Binding Site Elucidation in Drug Discovery
Author(s) -
Debbie K. Shoemark,
Christopher Williams,
Mark Fahey,
Judy J. Watson,
Sue Tyler,
Simon J. Scoltock,
Rosamund Z. Ellis,
Elaine Wickenden,
Antony J. Burton,
Jennifer Luise Hemmings,
Christopher Bailey,
David Dawbarn,
David E. Jane,
Chris Willis,
Richard B. Sessions,
Shelley Allen,
Matthew P. Crump
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
journal of medicinal chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.01
H-Index - 261
eISSN - 1520-4804
pISSN - 0022-2623
DOI - 10.1021/jm501307e
Subject(s) - chemistry , tropomyosin receptor kinase a , protein data bank (rcsb pdb) , nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy , binding site , tyrosine kinase , extracellular , receptor tyrosine kinase , biophysics , signal transduction , stereochemistry , nerve growth factor , biochemistry , receptor , biology
The tyrosine kinase A (TrkA) receptor is a validated therapeutic intervention point for a wide range of conditions. TrkA activation by nerve growth factor (NGF) binding the second extracellular immunoglobulin (TrkAIg2) domain triggers intracellular signaling cascades. In the periphery, this promotes the pain phenotype and, in the brain, cell survival or differentiation. Reproducible structural information and detailed validation of protein-ligand interactions aid drug discovery. However, the isolated TrkAIg2 domain crystallizes as a β-strand-swapped dimer in the absence of NGF, occluding the binding surface. Here we report the design and structural validation by nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy of the first stable, biologically active construct of the TrkAIg2 domain for binding site confirmation. Our structure closely mimics the wild-type fold of TrkAIg2 in complex with NGF ( 1WWW .pdb), and the (1)H-(15)N correlation spectra confirm that both NGF and a competing small molecule interact at the known binding interface in solution.

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