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Molecular evolution of the switch for progesterone and spironolactone from mineralocorticoid receptor agonist to antagonist

journal contribution
posted on 2025-11-20, 04:18 authored by Peter J Fuller, Yi-Zhou Yao, Ruitao JinRuitao Jin, Sitong HeSitong He, Beatriz Martin-Fernandez, Morag J Young, Brian SmithBrian Smith
The mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) is highly conserved across vertebrate evolution. In terrestrial vertebrates, the MR mediates sodium homeostasis by aldosterone and also acts as a receptor for cortisol. Although the MR is present in fish, they lack aldosterone. The MR binds progesterone and spironolactone as antagonists in human MR but as agonists in zebrafish MR. We have defined the molecular basis of these divergent responses using MR chimeras between the zebrafish and human MR coupled with reciprocal site-directed mutagenesis and molecular dynamic (MD) simulation based on the crystal structures of the MR ligand-binding domain. Substitution of a leucine by threonine in helix 8 of the ligand-binding domain of the zebrafish MR confers the antagonist response. This leucine is conserved across fish species, whereas threonine (serine in rodents) is conserved in terrestrial vertebrate MR. MD identified an interaction of the leucine in helix 8 with a highly conserved leucine in helix 1 that stabilizes the agonist conformation including the interaction between helices 3 and 5, an interaction which has previously been characterized. This switch in the MR coincides with the evolution of terrestrial vertebrates and of aldosterone synthesis. It was perhaps mandatory if the appearance of aldosterone as a specific mediator of the homeostatic salt retention was to be tolerated. The conformational changes also provide insights into the structural basis of agonism versus antagonism in steroid receptors with potential implications for drug design in this important therapeutic target.<p></p>

Funding

This work was supported by the National Health & Medical Research Council of Australia through Project Grant 1058336 and Senior Principal Research Fellowship 1002559 (to P. J. F.). The Hudson Institute is supported by the Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Scheme. R. J. and S. H. acknowledge receipt of Australian Research Training Scholarships. Part of this work was undertaken using resources from the National Computational Infrastructure, which is supported by the Australian Government and provided through Intersect Australia Ltd., and through the HPC-GPGPU Facility, which was established with the assistance of LIEF Grant LE170100200.

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History

Publication Date

2019-09-10

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

Volume

116

Issue

37

Pagination

6p. (p. 18578-18583)

Publisher

PNAS

ISSN

0027-8424

Rights Statement

© The Authors 2019

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