| Literature DB >> 24834023 |
Miles D Thompson1, Henri Xhaard2, Takeshi Sakurai3, Innocenzo Rainero4, Jyrki P Kukkonen5.
Abstract
Orexin/hypocretin peptide mutations are rare in humans. Even though human narcolepsy is associated with orexin deficiency, this is only extremely rarely due to mutations in the gene coding prepro-orexin, the precursor for both orexin peptides. In contrast, coding and non-coding variants of the OX1 and OX2 orexin receptors have been identified in many human populations; sometimes, these have been associated with disease phenotype, although most confer a relatively low risk. In most cases, these studies have been based on a candidate gene hypothesis that predicts the involvement of orexins in the relevant pathophysiological processes. In the current review, the known human OX1/HCRTR1 and OX2/HCRTR2 genetic variants/polymorphisms as well as studies concerning their involvement in disorders such as narcolepsy, excessive daytime sleepiness, cluster headache, polydipsia-hyponatremia in schizophrenia, and affective disorders are discussed. In most cases, the functional cellular or pharmacological correlates of orexin variants have not been investigated-with the exception of the possible impact of an amino acid 10 Pro/Ser variant of OX2 on orexin potency-leaving conclusions on the nature of the receptor variant effects speculative. Nevertheless, we present perspectives that could shape the basis for further studies. The pharmacology and other properties of the orexin receptor variants are discussed in the context of GPCR signaling. Since orexinergic therapeutics are emerging, the impact of receptor variants on the affinity or potency of ligands deserves consideration. This perspective (pharmacogenetics) is also discussed in the review.Entities:
Keywords: G protein-coupled receptor; hypocretin; orexin; pharmacogenetics; polymorphism
Year: 2014 PMID: 24834023 PMCID: PMC4018553 DOI: 10.3389/fnins.2014.00057
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurosci ISSN: 1662-453X Impact factor: 4.677
Figure 1Known amino acid sequence-changing variants of human OX. The variants are OX1167 Gly/Ser, OX1265 Leu/Met, OX1279 Arg/Glu, OX1280 Gly/Ala, OX1281 Arg/His, OX1408 Ile/Val, OX210 Pro/Ser, OX211 Pro/Thr, OX2193 Cys/Ser, OX2293 Ile/Val, OX2308 Val/Ile, and OX2401 Thr/Ile. The findings originate from Peyron et al. (2000) and Olafsdottir et al. (2001). The figure is modified from Kukkonen, J. P. (2013). Physiology of the orexinergic/hypocretinergic system: a revisit in 2012. Am. J. Physiol. Cell. Physiol. 301, C2–C32, © 2013. The American Physiological Society (Kukkonen, 2013).
Figure 2Known amino acid sequence-changing variants of human OX. The variants are OX210 Pro/Ser, OX211 Pro/Thr, OX2193 Cys/Ser, OX2293 Ile/Val, OX2308 Val/Ile, and OX2401 Thr/Ile. The findings originate from Peyron et al. (2000) and Olafsdottir et al. (2001). The figure is modified from Kukkonen, J. P. (2013). Physiology of the orexinergic/hypocretinergic system: a revisit in 2012. Am. J. Physiol. Cell. Physiol. 301, C2–C32, © 2013. The American Physiological Society (Kukkonen, 2013).
Summary of OX.
| 167 Gly/Ser | Ile | TM4 | rs144603792 | 652 G/A | Not linked with narcolepsy | Olafsdottir et al., | |
| 265 Leu/Met | IC3 | 793 C/A | Not linked with narcolepsy | Peyron et al., | |||
| 279 Arg/Gln | IC3 | rs7516785 | 989 G/A | Not linked with narcolepsy | Olafsdottir et al., | ||
| 280 Gly/Ala | IC3 | NP_001516 (C), AF041243 (G) | |||||
| 281 Arg/His | IC3 | rs41439244 | 842 G/A | 995 G/A | Not linked with narcolepsy | Peyron et al., | |
| 408 Ile/Val | C-terminus | rs2271933 | 1222 G/A | 1375 G/A | Not linked with narcolepsy | Peyron et al., | |
| A allele associated with 1.4-fold risk of migraine | Rainero et al., | ||||||
| 1.6-fold increased risk of major mood disorders | Rainero et al., | ||||||
| Association with polydipsia–hyponatremia in schizophrenia possible | Meerabux et al., | ||||||
| No allele associations in panic disorder | Annerbrink et al., | ||||||
| 10 Pro/Ser | Pro | N-terminus | rs41271310 | 28 C/T | 352 C/T | Not linked with narcolepsy | Peyron et al., |
| 11 Pro/Thr | N-terminus | rs41271312 | 31 C/A | 355 C/A | Not linked with narcolepsy | Peyron et al., | |
| Tourette syndrome/ADHD/sleep disorder 1.6 and 2.7-fold shifts in EC50 for orexin-A and -B | Thompson et al., | ||||||
| 193 Cys/Ser | TM4 | 577 T/A | Not linked with narcolepsy | Peyron et al., | |||
| 293 Ile/Val | IC3 | 1201 G/A | Not linked with narcolepsy | Olafsdottir et al., | |||
| 308 Ile/Val | Val | TM6 | rs265334 | 922 G/A | 1246 G/A | Not linked with narcolepsy | Peyron et al., |
| Ile variant associated with panic disorder in female patients | Annerbrink et al., | ||||||
| Migraine not associated. Association with CH found in some but not in all studies | Baumber et al., | ||||||
| Does not affect migraine drug response | Schürks et al., | ||||||
| 401Thr/Ile | C-terminus | 1202 C/T | Not linked with narcolepsy | Peyron et al., |
aa, amino acid; IC, intracellular loop; SNP, single nucleotide polymorphism; TM, transmebrane helix.
The corresponding amino acids can be defined with certainty only for TM regions.
Figure 3Structures of some orexin receptor antagonists developed for insomnia. Structures are rendered using ChemBioDraw Ultra 13.0 (PerkinElmer, Waltham, MA, USA).