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::*The structure serves as a baseline for understanding the conformational changes that occur upon substrate or inhibitor binding.
::*The structure serves as a baseline for understanding the conformational changes that occur upon substrate or inhibitor binding.
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===OmcS Structure===
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===Olmesartan recognition by hOAT1===
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The structural and functional analysis of hOAT1 in complex with the high-affinity antihypertensive drug olmesartan provides a detailed blueprint for substrate specificity and binding.
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*'''Binding Location and Pose'''
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:*Olmesartan binds within the central cavity of hOAT1 in an inward-facing conformation.
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:*It occupies Site 3 of the binding pocket, which is the primary polyspecific site for anionic substrates.
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:*The drug adopts a diagonal orientation relative to the membrane plane, a pose that requires more space than the smaller inhibitor probenecid. This orientation is similar to its conformation when bound to the angiotensin receptor.
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*''' Key Interacting Residues'''
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:*Olmesartan is surrounded by residues from multiple transmembrane helices (TM1, TM4, TM5, TM7, TM10, TM11) within a 5 Å distance. The critical interactions involve:
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:*Aromatic and Hydrophobic Cage:
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:*The biphenyl group of olmesartan is nestled near residue F438.
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:*The tetrazole ring is positioned between the bottom-gate residues M207 and F442.
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:*The imidazole moiety is located close to Y354.
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*'''Critical Role of Y230:'''
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:*Upon olmesartan binding, the side chain of Y230 undergoes a vertical rotation to accommodate and interact with the substrate.
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:*Mutagenesis studies confirm its importance: the Y230F mutation increased the IC₅₀ for olmesartan inhibition from 845.3 nM (Wild Type) to 2.36 µM, indicating a reduction in binding affinity.
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*'''The Bottom Gate Residues (M207 and F442):'''
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:*These residues are crucial for high-affinity olmesartan binding.
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:*The M207A mutant caused a 4-fold reduction in affinity (IC₅₀ = 3.78 µM).
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:*The F442A mutant caused a dramatic 12-fold reduction in affinity (IC₅₀ = 10.32 µM).
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:*This suggests these residues not only form a gate but also directly interact with large, transportable substrates like olmesartan.
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*''' Chloride Ion Coordination is Essential'''
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:*A key finding is the role of a chloride ion in stabilizing the olmesartan-bound state.
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:*The Chloride-Binding Site: A chloride ion (or bromide, used for confirmation) is observed coordinated between residues S203, Y230, and R466.
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'''Indirect Role of S203:''' While S203 does not directly contact olmesartan, it is critical for chloride coordination. This is a major species-specific difference, as rat OAT1 has an alanine at this position.
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*'''Functional Evidence of Chloride Dependence:'''
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The IC₅₀ of olmesartan is 2.01 µM in chloride-rich conditions but improves to 0.91 µM in chloride-depleted conditions, suggesting a more complex relationship where chloride may facilitate transport.
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The S203A mutant shows a severe ~5-fold reduction in olmesartan binding affinity specifically in the presence of chloride (IC₅₀: WT = 2.47 µM; S203A = 29.52 µM).
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The S203A-Y230F double mutant has an even more profound effect, increasing the IC₅₀ to 93.30 µM in chloride conditions, highlighting their synergistic role in chloride-dependent substrate binding.
The OmcS monomer has <scene name='83/835223/Secondary_structure/2'>remarkably little secondary structure</scene>.
The OmcS monomer has <scene name='83/835223/Secondary_structure/2'>remarkably little secondary structure</scene>.
<center>
<center>

Revision as of 06:50, 30 November 2025

Interactive 3D Complement in Proteopedia

About this image

Cryo-EM structures of human OAT1 reveal drug binding and inhibition mechanisms[1].

Hyung-Min Jeon, Jisung Eun, Kelly H. Kim, and Youngjin Kim.

Cell Volume 33, Issue 11, P1856-1866.E5, November 06, 2025

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.str.2025.07.019

Structure Tour

PDB ID 9kkk

Drag the structure with the mouse to rotate




See Also

  • Malvankar: A list of all interactive 3D complements for publications from the Malvankar group.

Notes & References

  1. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named m3
  2. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named strauss
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 Pace CN, Grimsley GR, Scholtz JM. Protein ionizable groups: pK values and their contribution to protein stability and solubility. J Biol Chem. 2009 May 15;284(20):13285-9. doi: 10.1074/jbc.R800080200. Epub 2009 , Jan 21. PMID:19164280 doi:http://dx.doi.org/10.1074/jbc.R800080200
  4. 4.0 4.1 Kajander T, Kahn PC, Passila SH, Cohen DC, Lehtio L, Adolfsen W, Warwicker J, Schell U, Goldman A. Buried charged surface in proteins. Structure. 2000 Nov 15;8(11):1203-14. PMID:11080642
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