Characterization of the Binding Site of
Aspartame in the Human Sweet Taste Receptor
Abstract:
The sweet taste receptor, a heterodimeric G protein-coupled receptor comprised of
T1R2 and T1R3, binds sugars, small molecule sweeteners,
and sweet proteins to multiple binding sites.
The dipeptide sweetener, aspartame binds in the Venus Flytrap Module (VFTM) of T1R2.
We developed homology models of the open and closed forms of human T1R2 and
human T1R3 VFTMs and their dimers and then docked aspartame into the closed form of
T1R2's VFTM. To test and refine the predictions of our model,
we mutated various T1R2 VFTM residues, assayed activity of the mutants and
identified 11 critical residues (S40, Y103, D142, S144, S165, S168, Y215,
D278, E302, D307, and R383) in and proximal to the binding pocket of the
sweet taste receptor that are important for ligand recognition and
activity of aspartame.
Furthermore, we propose that binding is dependent on 2 water molecules
situated in the ligand pocket that bridge 2 carbonyl groups of aspartame
to residues D142 and L279. These results shed light on the activation mechanism
and how signal transmission arising from the extracellular domain of the
T1R2 monomer of the sweet receptor leads to the perception of sweet taste.