TCB Publications - Abstract

Rezvan Shahoei and Emad Tajkhorshid. Menthol binding to the human α4β2 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor, facilitated by its strong partitioning in membrane. Journal of Physical Chemistry B, 124:1866-1880, 2020. (PMC: PMC7094167)

SHAH2020-ET We utilize various computational methodologies to study menthol's interaction with multiple organic phases, a lipid bilayer, and the human $\alpha4\beta2$ nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) -- the most abundant nAChR in the brain. First, force field parameters developed for menthol are validated in alchemical free energy perturbation simulations to calculate solvation free energies of menthol in water, dodecane, and octanol, and comparing the results against experimental data. Next, umbrella sampling is used to construct the free energy profile of menthol permeation across a 1-palmitoyl-2-oleoyl-sn-glycero-3-phosphocholine (POPC) bilayer. The results from a flooding simulation designed to study the water-membrane partitioning of menthol in a POPC lipid bilayer are used to determine the penetration depth and the preferred orientation of menthol in the bilayer. Finally, employing both docking and flooding simulations, menthol is shown to bind to different sites on the human $\alpha4\beta2$ nAChR. The most likely binding mode of menthol to a desensitized membrane-embedded $\alpha4\beta2$ nAChR is identified to be via a membrane-mediated pathway in which menthol binds to the sites at the lipid-protein interface after partitioning in the membrane. A rare but distinct binding mode in which menthol binds to the extracellular opening of the receptor's ion permeation pore is also reported.


Download Full Text

The manuscripts available on our site are provided for your personal use only and may not be retransmitted or redistributed without written permissions from the paper's publisher and author. You may not upload any of this site's material to any public server, on-line service, network, or bulletin board without prior written permission from the publisher and author. You may not make copies for any commercial purpose. Reproduction or storage of materials retrieved from this web site is subject to the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, Title 17 U.S.C.

Download full text: Journal