The ecdysone receptor (ECR), a nuclear transcription
factor controlling insect development, is a novel target
for insecticides such as dibenzoylhydrazines with low environmental
and toxicological impacts. To understand the high selectivity
of such synthetic molecules toward ECR, two homology models
of the Chironomus tentans ECR ligand-binding domain
(LDB) have been constructed by taking as templates the
known LBD crystal structures of the retinoic acid and vitamin
D receptors. Docking of 20-hydroxyecdysone (20E) and dibenzoylhydrazines
to the receptor suggests a novel superposition of the natural
and synthetic molecules; the N-tert-butyl substituent
of the dibenzoylhydrazines extends significantly beyond
the 20E volume. Our ECR–LBD protein models rationalize
how 20E and dibenzoylhydrazines interact with the ligand-binding
pocket. The homology model complexes provide new insights
that can be exploited in the rational design of new environmentally
safe insecticides.