We review the effect of some key advances in the characterization of molecular mechanisms of signaling by G protein-coupled
receptors (GPCRs) on our current understanding of mechanisms of drugs of abuse. These advances are illustrated by results
from our ongoing work on the actions of hallucinogens on serotonin (5-HT) receptors. We show how a combined computational
and experimental approach can reveal specific modes of receptor activation underlying the difference in properties of hallucinogens
compared with nonhallucinogenic congeners. These modes of activation—that can produce distinct ligand-dependent receptor states—are
identified in terms of structural motifs (SM) in molecular models of the receptors, which were shown to constitute conserved
functional microdomains (FM). The role of several SM/FMs in the activation mechanism of the GPCRs is presented in detail to
illustrate how this mechanism can lead to ligand-dependent modes of signaling by the receptors. Novel bioinformatics tools
are described that were designed to support the quantitative mathematical modeling of ligand-specific signaling pathways activated
by the 5-HT receptors targeted by hallucinogens. The approaches for mathematical modeling of signaling pathways activated
by 5-HT receptors are described briefly in the context of ongoing work on detailed biochemical models of 5-HT2A, and combined
5-HT2A/5-HT1A, receptor-mediated activation of the MAPK 1,2 pathway. The continuing need for increasingly more realistic representation
of signaling in dynamic compartments within the cell, endowed with spatio-temporal characteristics obtained from experiment,
is emphasized. Such developments are essential for attaining a quantitative understanding of how the multiple functions of
a cell are coordinated and regulated, and to evaluate the specifics of the perturbations caused by the drugs of abuse that
target GPCRs.
Keywords molecular modeling - molecular dynamics simulations - membrane proteins - signaling - mathematical modeling - bioinformatics tools
Published: January 6, 2006.