J Robert Lane1, Prashant Donthamsetti2, Jeremy Shonberg3, Christopher J Draper-Joyce1, Samuel Dentry1, Mayako Michino4, Lei Shi5, Laura López1, Peter J Scammells3, Ben Capuano3, Patrick M Sexton1, Jonathan A Javitch2, Arthur Christopoulos1. 1. Drug Discovery Biology, Department of Pharmacology, Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Monash University-Parkville Campus, Parkville, Victoria, Australia. 2. 1] Department of Psychiatry, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA. [2] Department of Pharmacology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, New York, USA. [3] Division of Molecular Therapeutics, New York State Psychiatric Institute, New York, New York, USA. 3. Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Monash Institute of Pharmaceutical Sciences, Monash University-Parkville Campus, Parkville, Victoria, Australia. 4. United States Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, New York, USA. 5. 1] United States Department of Physiology and Biophysics, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, New York, USA. [2] Institute for Computational Biomedicine, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, New York, USA.
Abstract
SB269652 is to our knowledge the first drug-like allosteric modulator of the dopamine D2 receptor (D2R), but it contains structural features associated with orthosteric D2R antagonists. Using a functional complementation system to control the identity of individual protomers within a dimeric D2R complex, we converted the pharmacology of the interaction between SB269652 and dopamine from allosteric to competitive by impairing ligand binding to one of the protomers, indicating that the allostery requires D2R dimers. Additional experiments identified a 'bitopic' pose for SB269652 extending from the orthosteric site into a secondary pocket at the extracellular end of the transmembrane (TM) domain, involving TM2 and TM7. Engagement of this secondary pocket was a requirement for the allosteric pharmacology of SB269652. This suggests a new mechanism whereby a bitopic ligand binds in an extended pose on one G protein-coupled receptor protomer to allosterically modulate the binding of a ligand to the orthosteric site of a second protomer.
SB269652 is to our knowledge the first drug-like allosteric modulator of the dopamine D2 receptor (D2R), but it contains structural features associated with orthosteric D2R antagonists. Using a functional complementation system to control the identity of individual protomers within a dimeric D2R complex, we converted the pharmacology of the interaction between SB269652 and dopamine from allosteric to competitive by impairing ligand binding to one of the protomers, indicating that the allostery requires D2R dimers. Additional experiments identified a 'bitopic' pose for SB269652 extending from the orthosteric site into a secondary pocket at the extracellular end of the transmembrane (TM) domain, involving TM2 and TM7. Engagement of this secondary pocket was a requirement for the allosteric pharmacology of SB269652. This suggests a new mechanism whereby a bitopic ligand binds in an extended pose on one G protein-coupled receptor protomer to allosterically modulate the binding of a ligand to the orthosteric site of a second protomer.
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the largest superfamily of cell surface
receptors, are involved in virtually all physiological processes[1,2] and are targeted by
approximately one third of current medications[1,3]. Over the last decade, the study
of allosteric sites on GPCRs has emerged as an attractive means of expanding the chemical
space associated with these drug targets[3].
More recently, “bitopic” ligands, i.e., molecules in which orthosteric and
allosteric pharmacophores have been linked together, have emerged as a novel approach to
developing selective GPCR ligands[4,5]. By concomitantly engaging both orthosteric and
allosteric sites, bitopic ligands combine the advantages of selectivity that can result from
engagement of an allosteric site with the high affinity and well-defined structure activity
relationships (SAR) associated with targeting an orthosteric pocket[4,5].
Interestingly, existing GPCR ligands that display unprecedented modes of selectivity may do
so via hitherto-unappreciated bitopic mechanisms[5,6]. Despite the presence of a
secondary pharmacophore, a bitopic ligand should still display competitive behavior because
the primary pharmacophore occupies the orthosteric site (essentially behaving as a more
selective competitive agonist or antagonist); any deviation from such behavior requires a
more complex mechanism of action[6-8].The dopamine D1-D5 receptors (D1–5Rs)
mediate the physiological functions of the catecholamine neurotransmitter, dopamine, with
the D2-like dopamine receptors (D2,3,4Rs) being particularly
acknowledged as important targets for the treatment of numerous central nervous system
disorders, including schizophrenia[9]. In an
effort to develop novel antipsychotics, there has been considerable research into the design
of more subtype-selective dopamine receptor ligands, albeit from an orthosteric ligand
perspective[10]. The ligand, SB269652,
emerged from one such series of studies[11,12]. As illustrated in Figure 1a, the tetrahydroisoquinoline (THIQ) core of SB269652 (derivatives
of which are known to interact with dopamine receptors[13]) contains the key elements expected to interact with the orthosteric
binding site of aminergic receptors. The molecule also contains a lipophilic appendage (an
indole-2-carboxamide) attached by an appropriately spaced linker[10], which is a feature of numerous subtype-selective
D2R ligands. Recently, however, Maggio and co-workers made the surprising
finding that SB269652 antagonizes the D2R through an allosteric, rather than an
orthosteric, mechanism[14], thus identifying
this compound as the first drug-like allosteric small molecule at this highly important
therapeutic target.
Figure 1
SB269652 is a negative allosteric modulator of the D2R
a) SB269652 contains key structural features consistent with an orthosteric mode
of interaction at D2-like dopamine receptors12,17. The action of
increasing concentrations of SB269652 upon a dopamine concentration-response curve was
measured at multiple signaling endpoints using whole cells expressing the hD2LR
or membranes derived from these cells ([35S]GTPγS (b), cAMP (c),
pERK1/2 (d) and β arrestin recruitment (e)). The allosteric behavior of SB269652
is illustrated in a Schild plot of the functional data (f), showing a clear deviation away
from a line of unity (dashed). Data represent mean values plus S.E.M from three
independent experiments.
A possible mechanism by which an orthosteric ligand can act allosterically is
within a dimeric/oligomeric receptor complex. Prior studies have provided evidence that the
D2R can exist as a homodimer, and that canonical orthosteric ligands can
interact cooperatively in this complex[15-17]. However, in all
these instances, the cooperativity is highly negative such that the pharmacology is
virtually indistinguishable from classic competition and thus the physiological relevance,
and pharmacological exploitation, of D2R homodimers remains to be definitively
established. In contrast, the pharmacology of SB269652 is unambiguously allosteric,
characterized by limited degrees of negative cooperativity with orthosteric agonists or
antagonists[14].The purpose of the current study was to determine how a ligand with a presumed
orthosteric mode of receptor engagement might act as a “classic” GPCR
allosteric modulator. Herein, we confirm the allosteric effects of SB269652 but demonstrate
that truncated derivatives containing a THIQ moiety act in a competitive manner with
dopamine. To reconcile an orthosteric mode of receptor engagement with the purely allosteric
effects mediated by the full length SB269652, we utilized a novel complementation assay in
which we can control the components of the D2R signaling unit in a dimeric
receptor complex[15] to demonstrate that
SB269652 engages one protomer of a D2R dimer and negatively modulates the binding
of ligands to the second protomer. When this system is constrained to restrict ligand
binding to only one protomer of the dimer, SB269652 acts competitively, thus identifying the
molecule as a novel chemical probe that can differentiate D2R monomers from
dimers/oligomers depending on the observed pharmacology. This property was exploited to
demonstrate the presence of native D2R dimers in rat striatum. Finally, by
combining molecular modeling with receptor mutagenesis and synthetic chemistry, we propose a
mechanistic basis for this unique pharmacology that involves SB269652 adopting an extended
binding pose as a bitopic ligand within a D2R protomer. The THIQ core binds
within the orthosteric site while the indole moiety interacts with a secondary pocket
involving TM2 and TM7, an interaction that is required for the transmission of the
allosteric effect to the second protomer. This novel mechanism extends the repertoire of
behaviors that can be expressed by multi-site-targeting bitopic GPCR ligands.
Results
SB269652 acts as a pure allosteric modulator at the D2R
We performed interaction studies between SB269652 and the endogenous ligand,
dopamine, using multiple assays (D2R-mediated [35S]GTPγS
binding (Figure 1b), inhibition of
forskolin-stimulated cAMP production (Figure 1c),
ERK1/2 phosphorylation (Figure 1d) and
β-arrestin 2 recruitment (Figure 1e; Table 1). In all cases, SB269652 behaved allosterically
at the D2R. Specifically, the SB269652-mediated reduction in dopamine potency
approached a limit at the highest antagonist concentrations. This behavior is consistent
with limited negative cooperativity upon saturation of an allosteric site, and is readily
visualized in the form of a Schild regression (Figure
1f). In contrast to the theoretically limitless dextral displacement of an
agonist concentration-response (C/R) curve mediated by an orthosteric antagonist (yielding
a Schild regression of unit slope), the interaction between SB269652 and dopamine was
characterized by a curvilinear Schild regression[18]. Application of an allosteric ternary complex model[18] to the C/R data yielded an estimate of
SB269652 affinity for the unoccupied receptor (KB = 145
– 416 nM across the different assays, Table
1) and its cooperativity with dopamine (αβ= 0.06 – 0.12).
Thus, SB269652 reduces dopamine potency by a factor of approximately 8 – 16 fold,
acting as a “partial” antagonist by allowing some dopamine tone to be
retained at maximal modulator concentrations.
Table 1
Characterization of SB269652 binding and function at the D2R. The
ability of SB269652, or fragments of SB269652 containing the THIQ7C moiety, to modulate
either the functional effect of agonists or their affinity at the D2R expressed
in Flp-In CHO cells was tested at various signaling endpoints. For SB269652, functional
data were fitted to either an allosteric ternary complex model (equation (10)) to derive values of affinity
(KB) and cooperativity (αβ) with the
orthosteric probe, whereas for fragments (THIQ7C, MIPS1071, MIPS1059) data were best
fitted with a Gaddum-Schild model of competitive antagonism (equation 7). Radioligand binding data were best fitted with equation (3).
Assay
TestLigand
ProbeLigand
pKB(KB,
nM)
Logαβ(αβ)
SchildSlope
pERK1/2
SB269652
dopamine
6.84 ± 0.04 (145)
−1.22 ± 0.04 (0.06)
−
S-3PPP
6.91 ± 0.10 (123)
−1.42 ± 0.03* (0.03)
−
aripiprazole
6.81 ± 0.19 (155)
−0.92 ± 0.11 (0.12)
−
THIQ7C
dopamine
5.60 ± 0.15 (2510)
1.03 ± 0.18
−
MIPS1071
dopamine
6.42 ± 0.21 (380)
1.00 ± 0.08
−
S-3PPP
6.44 ± 0.10 (363)
−
1.11 ± 0.18
aripiprazole
6.24 ± 0.23 (575)
−
0.94 ± 0.18
MIPS1059
dopamine
7.63 ± 0.12 (23.4)
−
1.06 ± 0.04
cAMP
SB269652
dopamine
6.69 ± 0.06 (204)
−1.20 ± 0.02 (0.06)
−
[35S]GTPγS
SB269652
dopamine
6.57 ± 0.37 (269)
−0.89 ± 0.20 (0.12)
−
β-arrestin
SB269652
dopamine
6.38 ± 0.21 (416)
−0.98 ± 0.13 (0.10)
−
Logα(α)
radioligand binding
SB269652
dopamine
6.38 ± 0.08 (416)
−0.85 ± 0.13 (0.14)
−
[3H]spiperone
−0.65 ± 0.03 (0.22)
−
Analysis with one-way ANOVA followed by a Bonferroni post-test revealed that
SB269652 displayed a significantly higher cooperativity with S-3PPP as compared to
dopamine and aripiprazole in a pERK1/2 assay, * = P < 0.05. Estimated parameter
values represent the mean ± SEM of at least three experiments performed in
duplicate.
Because negative allosteric modulation can be exerted upon dopamine affinity
(α) and/or signaling efficacy (β), we performed radioligand binding assays
to monitor the effects of SB269652 directly on orthosteric ligand affinity. First, we
performed saturation binding experiments with the orthosteric antagonist,
[3H]spiperone, in the presence of SB269652 (Supplementary Results, Supplementary Fig. 1a
& b), which caused a limited rightward shift in [3H]spiperone
pKD with no significant decrease in Bmax.
Analysis using an allosteric ternary complex model yielded an affinity of
KB = 933 nM, and modest negative cooperativity with
[3H]spiperone (α = 0.28). We then performed [3H]spiperone
competition binding experiments with dopamine in the presence of SB269652. Analysis of
these data yielded values of affinity (KB = 416 nM), and
cooperativity with dopamine (α = 0.14), similar to those determined from the
functional assays (Table 1, Supplementary Fig. 1 and Supplementary Table
1). This indicates that SB269652 behaves predominantly as a negative modulator of
orthosteric ligand affinity.
SB269652 displays ‘probe dependence’
Probe dependence is a phenomenon whereby the allosteric effect (specifically, the
extent of cooperativity) changes depending on the properties of the orthosteric ligand
used to probe receptor function[19]. This
is distinct from the behavior of an orthosteric antagonist, which does not discriminate
between different orthosteric agonists. We thus chose two structurally distinct
D2R agonists, namely the clinically effective antipsychotic, aripiprazole,
and the partial agonist S-3PPP (preclamol)[19], and investigated the effects of SB269652 using D2R-mediated
phosphorylation of ERK1/2 as a functional assay. Although the estimated affinity
(KB) determined for SB269652 did not differ significantly
when tested against each agonist, the degree of negative cooperativity between SB269652
and S-3PPP (αβ = 0.03; equating to a maximal 33-fold decrease in dopamine
potency) was significantly higher than that observed for either dopamine or aripiprazole
(αβ = 0.06 and 0.12 respectively, Supplementary Fig. 2, Table 1).
Thus SB269652 displays probe dependence.
The THIQ moiety of SB269652 occupies the orthosteric site
Another classic expectation of allosteric modulators is structural diversity from
orthosteric ligands, since the modulators target a spatially distinct binding
pocket[20]. In this regard, the action
of SB269652 as a negative allosteric modulator of the dopamine D2R is
surprising given that it was first generated as part of a series of orthosteric
D2R antagonists and contains structural features consistent with an
orthosteric mode of binding[10,21]. In particular, the THIQ moiety of SB269652
contains an aliphatic amine that is expected to form a salt bridge with the conserved
aspartate (Asp3.32) of aminergic GPCRs.To confirm whether the binding of SB269652 involves occupancy of the orthosteric
site of the D2R, we generated progressively truncated derivatives that retained
the 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline-7-carbonitrile (THIQ7C) moiety. As illustrated in Figure 2, these SB269652 fragments acted competitively
with dopamine in an ERK1/2 phosphorylation assay. The smallest fragment, THIQ7C
(2) (Figure 2a), had a 17-fold lower
affinity (KB = 2.51 µM, Table 1) than SB269652. When this fragment was extended to
2-propyl-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline-7-carbonitrile (3, MIPS1071, Figure 2b) the affinity increased
(KB = 380 nM, Table
1) to the same level as SB269652, but the inhibition remained competitive. We also
performed analogous experiments using either aripiprazole (Supplementary Fig. 3a & c) or
S-3PPP (Supplementary Fig. 3b &
c) as the orthosteric agonist and determined affinities for MIPS1071, which were
not significantly different from those determined when dopamine was used (aripiprazole -
KB = 575 nM, S-3PPP - KB = 363
nM, Table 1). The competitive behavior of MIPS1071
was confirmed in a second assay measuring inhibition of forskolin-stimulated cAMP
production (Supplementary Fig. 3d
& e).
N-((trans)-4-(2-(7-cyano-3,4-dihydroisoquinolin-2(1H)yl)ethyl)cyclohexyl)acetamide
(4, MIPS1059), which included the carboxamide but not the indole moiety of
SB269652, also behaved competitively (KB = 23.4 nM, Figure 2c & Table
1). In all cases, Schild slopes were not significantly different from unity
(Figure 2d).
Figure 2
Fragments of SB269652 containing the tetrahydroisoquinoline pharmacophore interact
with the D2R in an orthosteric manner
We generated progressively truncated fragments containing the
tetrahydroisoquinoline moiety from the smallest
1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline-7-carbonitrile (THIQ7C) (a), to MIPS1071 (b) and MIPS1059
(c). In an assay measuring D2R mediated phosphorylation of ERK1/2, all
fragments caused parallel dextral shifts in dopamine potency. This is illustrated
graphically by a Schild plot (d). Data represent mean values plus S.E.M from three
independent experiments. Molecular modeling and ligand docking experiments, using a
homology model of the D2R, reveal that both the smallest orthosteric fragment
THIQ7C (e) and SB269652 (f) occupy the orthosteric binding site within the receptor with
the protonated tertiary amine of the tetrahydrosioquinoline moiety. In addition the
indole-2-carboxamide moiety of SB269652 extends out towards TM2 and TM7.
Molecular docking using a homology model of the D2R, based on the
crystal structure of the D3R, located the smallest fragment, THIQ7C, in the
orthosteric site. In this pose, the aromatic head group interacts with conserved aromatic
residues of TM6, and the positively charged aliphatic amine forms a salt bridge with
Asp1143.32, both characteristic interactions in the orthosteric binding site
of aminergic GPCRs (Figure 2e). Interestingly, when
the full length SB269652 was docked with the THIQ core in the orthosteric site, the linker
and secondary pharmacophore could be accommodated in a potential bitopic manner by a
secondary binding pocket towards the extracellular interface between TM2 and TM7 (Figure 2f), similar to a previous finding with the
extended D2R antagonist R-22[22,23]. In subsequent MD
simulations, the THIQ core of SB269652 was extremely stable, consistent with its binding
to the orthosteric site in the context of the full length molecule. Based on these
results, however, we would also expect the full-length SB269652 to act competitively
(Figure 3a), in contrast to its observed allosteric
behavior, suggesting that an additional element is required to account for this
mechanism.
Figure 3
A functional complementation assay demonstrates that SB269652 acts as a negative
allosteric modulator across a D2R dimer
(a) The purely allosteric action of SB269652 cannot be reconciled with the dual
orthosteric/allosteric mode of interaction predicted by both our ligand fragment and
molecular modeling experiments. At a dimeric D2R, SB269652 can bind in a
bitopic manner to one protomer and exert negative cooperativity across the dimer for the
binding of dopamine to the other protomer in agreement with its purely allosteric
pharmacology (b) We used a complementation assay to investigate the pharmacology of a
D2R dimer. This system consists of a non-functional
D2R-Gαqi5 fusion protein (protomer B) that can still bind
dopamine or SB269652 and co-expression of a WT D2R (protomer A) to restore a
functional unit that couples to an aequorin readout of receptor function. SB269652 is
unable to completely antagonize the action of 100 µM dopamine at the functional
D2R dimer, in contrast to the complete inhibition exerted by the competitive
antagonist sulpiride. (c) The functional effect of dopamine at the dimer is retained even
if the important Asp1143.32 of protomer B is mutated to alanine (D114A). At
this complemented pair, SB269652 is able to completely inhibit the action of 100
µM dopamine. Data represent the mean ± S.E.M. of three independent
experiments.
SB269652 exerts allostery across a D2R dimer
Family A GPCRs, including the D2R, may form dimers or higher order
oligomers, although some debate remains as to both their transience and functional
importance [16,24-30]. An attractive
hypothesis to reconcile the allosteric pharmacology of SB269652 with its apparent
engagement of the orthosteric site is that SB269652 binds within one protomer of a dimeric
or oligomeric D2R complex and allosterically modulates the binding of dopamine
at the other protomer(s) (Figure 3a). If it is
assumed that SB269652 exerts very high negative cooperativity with itself, which would
prevent a second molecule of SB269652 binding to the other protomer within the complex,
but limited negative cooperativity with dopamine and other canonical orthosteric ligands,
then this can account for the observed pharmacology.One obstacle to understanding the relevance of Family A GPCR oligomerization has
been the relative paucity of robust experimental techniques to allow control of the
identity of the components comprising the signaling unit. We recently addressed this by
developing a functional complementation assay that enables such control[15]. In brief, a D2R-Gqi5
fusion construct (termed ‘protomer B’) was generated in which the G
protein was fused directly to the short cytoplasmic tail of the D2R (Figure 3b). Although expressed at the cell surface, this
construct is non-functional, as measured in an aequorin-based assay, due to steric
constraint of the fused G protein. When coexpressed, wild-type (WT) D2R
(‘protomer A’), which also cannot signal alone due to the absence of
Gq coupling or free Gqi5, rescues function by signaling through
the G protein provided by protomer B. Thus, coexpression of two
‘non-functional’ D2R protomers allows the study of a defined
D2R dimer or higher order complex. We used this functional complementation
assay to test our hypothesis that the modulation mediated by SB269652 occurs across a
dimeric complex.When the two D2R protomers (A and B) were stably coexpressed, a
robust concentration-dependent response to dopamine was observed (pEC50 = 6.24
± 0.11) (Figure 3b). We then tested the
ability of increasing concentrations of the orthosteric antagonist, sulpiride, or SB269652
to inhibit the effect of different dopamine concentrations. As expected, sulpiride
completely inhibited the effect of the highest concentration (100 µM) of dopamine
(pIC50 = 8.30 ± 0.18). In contrast, SB269652 only partially
antagonized dopamine (Figure 3b), consistent with the
limited negative cooperative effects we had identified in our cell-based and radioligand
binding assays.We also previously demonstrated that mutation of the conserved D2R
Asp1143.32 to alanine (D114A) in protomer B, which prevents ligand binding to
the orthosteric site of that protomer, allows agonist binding to protomer A to engage the
Gqi5 protein fused to protomer B, reflecting a receptor-G protein engagement
mechanism in which only one protomer is competent to bind ligand[15]. If SB269652 interacts in a bitopic manner with the
D2R in protomer B to transmit an allosteric effect to protomer A, then we
predicted this effect would be lost upon coexpression of WT D2R as protomer A
and D2-Asp1143.32Ala-Gqi5 as protomer B. Under this
condition, the only mode of interaction available to both dopamine and
SB269652 would be via protomer A, which would manifest as competition because both ligands
would engage the orthosteric site upon binding this protomer. As shown in Figure 3c, dopamine retained the ability to stimulate a
response with a potency not significantly different from that of the WT-WT complement pair
(pEC50 = 6.27 ± 0.11, Student’s t-test P >0.05) but,
importantly, the response to 100 µM dopamine was now completely antagonized by
both sulpiride and SB269652 (pIC50 = 8.92 ± 0.10 and pIC50 =
7.17 ± 0.10, respectively) in a manner that is indistinguishable from a
competitive interaction. Collectively, our functional complementation experiments are
consistent with a model whereby SB269652 acts as an allosteric modulator only when able to
transmit its cooperative effects across a D2R dimer interface; engagement of a
single protomer results in competition with the cognate agonist.
Bitopic engagement by SB269652 of D2R is critical
SB269652 has an extended structure similar to many competitive D2R
ligands[10]. However, in contrast to
previous studies that have reported very high negative cooperativity between orthosteric
ligands at the D2R[15-17], the negative allosteric effect of SB269652
is clearly saturable. Consequently, we hypothesized that this unique pharmacology is
related to SB269652’s ability to bind in a bitopic pose that extends from the
orthosteric site into a secondary pocket between TM2 and TM7 identified in our molecular
model. The interaction between the indole-2-carboxamide moiety and the secondary pocket
may be a requirement for the cross-protomer allosteric action of SB269652.To investigate this, we first generated the cis-isomer of
SB269652 (5, MIPS1217) with the hypothesis that the indole-2-carboxamide
moiety would have a different orientation relative to the THIQ orthosteric core. In our
molecular docking, in which the THIQ core is restrained in a similar pose as THIQ7C, the
indole-2-carboxamide moiety of SB269652 is oriented towards a secondary pocket lined by
the extracellular portions of TM2 and TM7, while that of its cis-isomer
cannot reach this pocket. Based on these initial docking poses, we carried out molecular
dynamics simulations to explore the best binding modes of SB269652 and MIPS1217,
containing the trans- or cis-orientation of the
cyclohexyl spacer, respectively. Similar to SB269652, the THIQ core of MIPS1217 is very
stable in the orthosteric site. SB269652 remains in an extended conformation, and its
cyclohexyl and indole-2-carboxamide moieties interact with Val912.61 and
Glu952.65, respectively (Figure 4a). In
contrast, the cyclohexyl group of the cis-isomer, MIPS1217, still
contacts Val912.61 but the indole-2-carboxamide is oriented towards TM6 and not
TM2 (Figure 4b). Thus, if the interaction of the
secondary pharmacophore with TM2 is essential for the allosteric effect, one would expect
MIPS1217 to act as a competitive antagonist. In agreement with this hypothesis, MIPS1217
antagonized dopamine at the D2R in a purely competitive manner in a pERK1/2
assay (KB = 195 nM, Figure 4c,
4d & Supplementary
Table 2).
Figure 4
Interaction of the indole moiety with a secondary pocket between TMs 2 and 7 is
required for the allosteric pharmacology of SB269652
When docked into a homology model of the D2R the
tetrahydroisoquinoline core of both SB258652 (a) and the cis-isomer
(MIPS1217, b) occupy similar positions within the orthosteric core. In contrast while the
indole amine moiety of SB269652 extends into a secondary pocket between TM2 and TM7, where
the nitrogen of the indole heterocyle makes a hydrogen bond interaction with
Glu952.65 and the cyclohexyl group makes a hydrophobic interaction with
Val912.61, this moiety has a different orientation for MIPS1217 and extends
towards the top of TM6. (c) In an assay measuring D2R mediated phosphorylation
of ERK1/2, MIPS1217 behaved competitively (parallel dextral shifts in dopamine potency).
This is illustrated graphically by a Schild plot (d). SB269652 affinity or negative
cooperativity with dopamine (e) or affinity of the cis isomer MIPS1217
(e) at mutant D2R receptors was determined through interaction studies with
dopamine in an ERK1/2 phosphorylation assay. Data represent mean values plus S.E.M from
three independent experiments.
We then explored the interactions that might contribute to the allosteric effect
of SB269652. We mutated Val912.61 & Glu952.65 to alanine and
generated additional cell lines stably expressing WT or mutant D2Rs at similar
levels (supplementary Table 3).
Dopamine displayed similar potencies at all mutants compared to the WT, consistent with
the mutated residues being outside the orthosteric site (Supplementary Table 2). At the WT
D2R, SB269652’s affinity (KB = 549 nM)
and negative cooperativity (αβ = 0.06) were very similar to the results
presented above (Supplementary Fig. 4,
Supplementary Tables 2 & 4). Unfortunately, the Val912.61Ala
mutant displayed no detectable binding of [3H]spiperone up to a concentration
of 10 nM, but saturation experiments with an alternative orthosteric ligand,
[3H]raclopride, revealed that the receptor variant bound with an affinity and
Bmax not significantly different from WT (Supplementary Table 3).
Val912.61 was predicted to make a hydrophobic interaction with the cyclohexyl
group of both SB269652 and MIPS1217. Mutation to alanine did not alter the affinity
(KB = 831 nM) of SB269652 but led to a significant decrease
in the negative cooperativity of with dopamine (αβ = 0.33) (Figure 4e, Supplementary Table 2). In contrast, a significant decrease in affinity
was observed for MIPS1217 (KB = 891 nM, Supplementary Table 2 & Figure 4f). Glu952.65 was predicted to make a
hydrogen bond interaction with the heterocyclic nitrogen within the indole moiety of
SB269652 but not MIPS1217. Mutation of this residue to alanine caused both a significant
decrease in both the negative cooperativity (αβ = 0.48, Supplementary Table 2) with dopamine
and affinity of SB269652 for the D2R (KB = 724 nM,
Figure 4e, Supplementary Table 2). In contrast Glu952.65Ala had no
effect on the competitive profile of MIPS1217 (Figure
4f, Supplementary Table
2). Given that this mutation had the most significant effect on the allosteric
pharmacology of SB269652, we extended our studies to a radioligand binding assay. These
experiments revealed that, while Glu952.65Ala had no effect on dopamine
affinity, significant decreases were observed in SB269652 affinity (WT,
KB = 645 nM; Glu952.65Ala,
KB = 2754 nM), as well as its negative cooperativity with
dopamine (α = 0.60), and [3H]spiperone (α = 0.47) compared to
the WT receptor (dopamine, α = 0.29; [3H]spiperone, α =0.29),
consistent with the functional studies (Supplementary Fig. 5, Supplementary Table 4).To further explore the importance of the predicted hydrogen bond interaction
between the indole heterocyclic nitrogen of SB269652 and Glu952.65 at the top
of TM2, we generated an N-methyl indole derivative of SB269652, MIPS1500 (6),
which would be unable to form the hydrogen bond with Glu952.65 and thus unable
to properly engage the secondary pocket (Figure 5a).
In a pERK1/2 assay, MIPS1500 antagonized dopamine in a competitive manner
(KB = 58 nM, Figure 5b
& Supplementary Table 2).
We also hypothesized that the N-methyl indole of MIPS1500 would interact with a
hydrophobic alanine residue at position 2.65, functionally recapitulating the allosteric
effect resulting from the interaction between the heterocyclic nitrogen of the indole of
SB269652 and Glu952.65 in the WT receptor. Therefore, we repeated the
experiment using the Glu952.65Ala mutant and MIPS1500. In contrast to our
observations at the WT receptor, the reduction in dopamine potency mediated by MIPS1500
approached a limit, consistent with negative cooperativity (KB
= 239 nM, logαβ = 0.03, Figure 5c, 5d
& Supplementary Table 2);
remarkably, MIPS1500 thus displayed both an affinity and negative cooperativity with
dopamine at the Glu952.65Ala mutant that was not significantly different from
SB269652 at the WT D2R (Student’s t-test, P > 0.05). This
‘rescue’ of allosteric pharmacology underlines the importance of the
interaction of the indole-2-carboxamide with a secondary pocket between TM2 and TM7, and
in particular with Glu952.65.
Figure 5
When the D2R Glu952.65 Ala mutant is expressed as protomer B,
the orthosteric antagonist MIPS1500 acts as a negative allosteric modulator across a
D2R dimer
The action of MIPS1500 (a), which differs from SB269652 through the N-methylated
of the nitrogen in the indole heterocycle, at the WT D2R (b) or the
D2R Glu952.65Ala mutant (c) in an assay measuring D2R
mediated phosphorylation of ERK1/2. These data are illustrated graphically by a Schild
plot (d). (e) At a complement pair consisting of coexpression of a non-functional
D2R-Gαqi5 fusion protein (protomer B) and a WT
D2R (protomer A), MIPS1500 is able to antagonize the action of 100 µM
dopamine at the functional D2R dimer. At a complement pair of a WT
D2R (protomer A) and a D2R Glu952.65Ala (E95A) mutant
(Protomer B), MIPS1500 displays incomplete antagonism of 100 µM dopamine. Data
represent mean values plus S.E.M from three independent experiments. Data for sulpiride at
the WT:WT complement pair are replotted from Figure
3.
Finally, we made use of the complementation system to investigate whether the
allosteric action of MIPS1500 at the Glu952.65Ala mutant is analogous to our
proposed mode of action for SB269652; namely allostery across a D2R dimer.
Consistent with a competitive interaction, MIPS1500 antagonized the effect of 100
µM dopamine when protomers A and B were both WT D2R (Figure 5e, pIC50 = 7.06 ± 015). In
contrast when a complemented pair was expressed consisting of the Glu952.65Ala
mutant D2R as protomer B and a WT D2R as protomer A, MIPS1500 only
partially antagonized the effect of dopamine (Figure
5e, pIC50 = 5.81 ± 0.30) due to limited negative cooperativity
mediated by the D2R mutant across the dimer. Sulpiride competitively inhibited
the action of 100 µM dopamine at both the WT:WT and WT:Glu952.65Ala
with similar potency (WT:WT, pIC50 = 8.21 ± 0.14; WT:Glu95Ala,
pIC50 = 8.49 ± 0.17, Figure 5e).
Collectively, our data provided evidence that SB269652 binds to one protomer of a
D2R dimer in a bitopic mode and modulates the action of dopamine at the
other; the interaction of the indole-2-carboxamide moiety of SB269652 with a secondary
pocket is essential for this allosteric pharmacology.
SB269652 is allosteric at D2Rs in native tissue
If the mode of action of SB269652 involves an obligate allosteric interaction in
a dimeric context but a competitive interaction in a monomeric context, then the potential
exists that the molecule can be used as a molecular ‘probe’ to investigate
the presence of such complexes in native tissues and, potentially, in
vivo. The D2R is highly expressed in the striatum[9] and we thus performed a
[35S]GTPγS binding assay using membranes from rat striatal tissue
(Supplementary Figure 6).
Dopamine stimulated [35S]GTPγS binding in a concentration-dependent
manner with a pEC50 =5.85 ± 0.11. Increasing concentrations of SB269652
caused a limited dextral shift in the dopamine C/R curve, consistent with negative
allosteric modulation (KB = 537 nM; αβ =
0.22). As illustrated by the Schild regression, this effect was not significantly
different (Student’s t-test) from that observed when analogous experiments were
performed in heterologous cells expressing the D2R (Supplementary Figure 6, Table 1). Thus, in the context of our currently
proposed bitopic model of action, the pharmacology of SB269652 in rat striatal membranes
as a negative allosteric modulator suggests the presence of native D2R dimers
or higher order oligomers in this tissue.
Discussion
By using complementary approaches, we have identified a unique mechanism of action
for SB269652, characterized by a “switch” in pharmacology from allosteric to
competitive, depending on whether the interaction occurs at a functional dimeric (or higher
order oligomer) versus monomeric Family A GPCR. Although prior studies have provided some
evidence for cooperativity between orthosteric ligands at oligomeric GPCRs[16,31-34], we propose that the
unique allosteric/competitive switch described here within the same molecule is likely
related to its binding in a bitopic pose that extends from the orthosteric site into a
secondary pocket between TM2 and TM7, the latter pocket being essential for transmission of
cooperativity across a D2R dimer. This finding extends the concept of the bitopic
ligand from a novel means of engendering receptor selectivity within a monomeric receptor to
one that can also yield chemical probes sensitive to GPCR dimerization status.Many central nervous system diseases, including schizophrenia and
Parkinson’s disease, are treated with drugs that bind D2-like dopamine
receptors[9]. To date, however, drug
discovery at these receptors has focused on targeting the orthosteric site, and such an
approach is limited by challenges associated with lack of receptor subtype selectivity and
unwanted side-effects. As such, allosteric targeting may hold several advantages, such as
greater subtype selectivity and/or maintenance of spatiotemporal patterns associated with
endogenous neurohumoral signalling[3]. This
is particularly pertinent to schizophrenia, in which orthosteric blockade of the
D2R, whilst effective for the treatment of the positive symptoms of the
disease, is associated with extrapyramidal side-effects[35]. Partial blockade by a negative allosteric modulator with limited
cooperativity represents a potentially safer therapeutic strategy. We demonstrate that
SB269652 meets this mechanistic criterion at the D2R, with a modest negative
cooperativity. However, because SB269652 binds in a bitopic manner occupying the orthosteric
site, the mechanism behind the allostery mediated by SB269652 cannot readily be explained
via the formation of a ternary complex comprising an orthosteric ligand, SB269652 and a
single D2R protomer. Thus, the allosteric behavior of SB269652 differs from other
prototypical allosteric modulators of aminergic GPCRs. For example, many allosteric
modulators described for the muscarinic acetylcholine receptors have a pharmacology that can
be theoretically accommodated within a monomeric receptor model[36], as most recently demonstrated directly by the solution of the
crystal structure of the M2 muscarinic receptor bound to both an agonist and a
positive allosteric modulator[37].The crystal structure of the D3R bound to the antagonist eticlopride
revealed a “secondary” pocket in the receptor structure that has been
subsequently demonstrated to be accessed by extended orthosteric ligands, such as
R-22[21-23] to achieve subtype-selectivity. Recent studies have
illustrated that the indole-2-carboxamide of R-22 also occupies a secondary pocket
positioned at the interface between TMs 1, 2, and 7 in the highly homologous
D2R[22,23]. It should be noted, however, that R-22, with the same
indole-2-carboxamide moiety as SB269652, is a competitive antagonist[23], while the interaction of the
indole-2-carboxamide moiety with the secondary pocket is critical for the allosteric action
of SB269652. As such, the exact nature of the interactions made within this pocket must be
affected by the different orthosteric binding moieties and linker regions of R-22 and
SB269652 to determine the differing pharmacological properties of these two ligands. Of
interest, previous cysteine crosslinking studies identified residues at the extracellular
end of TM1 that form a symmetrical interface between protomers of a D2R
homo-oligomer[25], and it is possible
that this interface is involved in the communication of cooperativity from one
SB269652-bound protomer to the other protomer in addition to the secondary pocket between
TM2 and TM7.To date, studies of bitopic ligands at GPCRs have been largely restricted to the
muscarinic receptors. Such bitopic modes of interaction underlie the receptor subtype
selectivity of these ligands or even confer biased agonism[5,6,38]. Our study suggests that ligands at other GPCRs, even those
with allosteric pharmacology, may have an unappreciated bitopic mode of interaction.
Furthermore, by demonstrating that SB269652 acts as an allosteric modulator at a
D2R dimer we expand the novel pharmacology that can be conferred by a bitopic
mode of interaction when placed in the context of a dimeric receptor.With regards to the native functional signaling unit for Family A GPCRs, studies
have shown that rhodopsin, the β2 adrenergic receptor and the µ
opioid receptor can couple efficiently to G proteins when reconstituted into high density
lipoprotein particles containing only a single receptor[39-41]. However, these
observations do not rule out the ability of GPCRs to dimerize in their native environment,
and there is accumulating evidence that Family A GPCRs, including the D2R, can
form di/oligomeric complexes that modulate receptor function[24,42]. Indeed, negative
cooperativity has been demonstrated for agonist and antagonist binding across a GPCR
heterodimer, mediated by conformational changes within both protomers and/or at the dimer
interface[15,16,31,33,34,43,44]. With the exception of our
recent study, where we had to modify one protomer within a D2R dimer to observe
positive modulation of agonist efficacy exerted by an antagonist binding at the unoccupied
protomer[15], the majority of prior work
revealed high negative cooperativity of ligand binding across GPCR hetero or homo-oligomers
such that ligand binding to one protomer precludes binding to the second protomer[45]. As such the exclusively weak negative
allosteric modulation of agonist and antagonist binding exerted by SB269652 at the WT
D2R is distinct. We have now made use of our functional complementation system
to demonstrate that at a D2R dimer, SB269652 acts at one protomer to
allosterically modulate the binding of dopamine at another protomer within the complex.
Mutational impairment of the orthosteric site within one protomer to bias the interaction
between ligands towards the other protomer revealed a mechanism consistent with competition.
To our knowledge, such a switch between competitive and allosteric pharmacology for the same
molecule depending on the oligomerization status of a GPCR has never been demonstrated
before, and opens up a new avenue for chemical biology applications of GPCR ligands. It must
be acknowledged, however, that our results do not completely rule out an alternative
mechanism whereby SB269652 is distributed between two different binding orientations
(orthosteric and allosteric) within the same protomer. However, such an interaction would
require SB269652 to adopt a purely allosteric mode within the receptor with comparable
affinity to its orthosteric mode. This type of interaction is not supported by our modeling,
structure activity and mutagenesis studies, and is difficult to reconcile with the results
of our complementation experiments or with the negative cooperativity of SB269652 with
larger compounds such as aripiprazole.There is increasing evidence that dimeric or oligomeric complexes of GPCRs may be
transient in nature[27-30]. Thus, SB269652 may switch between orthosteric
and allosteric pharmacology at the D2R depending on factors that might influence
the formation of transient dimers, such as receptor number or membrane microdomains.
Although many studies have demonstrated that D2R receptors can form homodimers in
heterologous systems, evidence that such complexes exist in vivo remains
elusive[24,42]. The allosteric action of SB269652 at D2Rs expressed in rat
striatal tissue points towards the existence of D2R dimer/oligomers in this
native tissue, assuming that our model is correct. This highlights the utility of ligands
that have differential pharmacology at monomeric versus dimeric/oligomeric receptor
complexes as potential probes for such complexes in vivo. In addition to
homodimers, the D2R has been reported to form heteromeric complexes with other
GPCRs and these complexes have been highlighted as attractive potential therapeutic
targets[42,46-49]. Through the
demonstration that the allosteric mechanism of action of SB269652 is consistent with a model
involving a D2R dimer, our study provides a proof-of-concept for an approach to
target such GPCR complexes with ligands that modulate receptor function specifically across
GPCR heterodimers.
Online Methods
Materials
Dulbecco’s modified Eagle’s medium, Flp-In CHO cells, and
hygromycin B were purchased from Invitrogen (Carlsbad, CA). Fetal bovine serum (FBS) was
purchased from ThermoTrace (Melbourne, VIC, Australia). [3H]spiperone,
[3H]raclopride, [35S]GTPγS (1000 Ci/mmol), AlphaScreen
reagents and Ultima gold scintillation cocktail were from PerkinElmer (Boston, MA).
pcDNA3L–His-CAMYEL was purchased from ATCC. All other reagents were purchased
from Sigma Aldrich (St. Louis, MO).
Rats were decapitated, the whole brain removed from the skull. Striatal tissue
was dissected and placed in 10 ml of 20 mM Tris–HCl buffer, pH 7.4, containing
NaCl (100 mM), MgCl2 (6 mM) and EDTA (1 mM)] and a cocktail of protease
inhibitors (Roche Diagnostics, Mannheim, Germany) at 4 °C. The tissue was
homogenized using a Polytron homogeniser for 3 10-second intervals on the maximum
setting with 30-second periods on ice between each burst. The homogenate was made up to
30 mL and centrifuged (1,000 g, 10 min, 4 °C), the pellet discarded and the
supernatant recentrifuged at 30,000 g for 1 hour at 4 °C.
Molecular Biology
cDNA in pcDNA3.1+ encoding the long isoform of the wild-type human
D2 dopamine receptor (D2LR) was obtained from Missouri
University of Science and Technology (http://www.cdna.org). Oligonucleotides
were purchased from GeneWorks (Hindmarsh, Australia). An N-terminal c-myc epitope tag
(EQKLISEEDL) was introduced to the sequence of the D2LR and flanking AttB
sites were introduced to the WT D2LR by overlap extension polymerase chain
reaction to allow sub-cloning into the pDONR201™ vector. The WT or c-myc tagged
wildtype (WT) D2LR receptor construct in pDONR201™ were subsequently
transferred into the pEF5/frt/V5/dest vector using the LR clonase enzyme mix
(Invitrogen). Desired mutations were introduced using the Quikchange™
site-directed mutagenesis kit (Agilent). Receptor constructs in pEF5/frt/V5/dest were
used to transfect Flp-In CHO cells (Invitrogen). Cells were transfected using linear
polyethyleneimine (PEI, Polysciences, Warrington, PA) as described previously[51].
ERK1/2 phosphorylation assay
Experiments were performed as described previously[50]. Concentration-response stimulation or inhibition curves
were generated by exposure of the cells to antagonist ligand for 30 min and then
dopamine for 5 min. Data were normalized to the response generated by 10% fetal
bovine serum.
BRET cAMP assay
D2LR-Flp-In CHO cells were transfected with 2µg of
pcDNA3L–His-CAMYEL. The assay was performed as described previously with the
following difference: 30 minutes prior to agonist addition appropriate concentrations of
SB269652 or fragment ligand were added. 5 minutes following agonist addition 10
µL of forskolin was added to a final concentration of 3 µM. Data were
normalized to the level of cAMP generated by 3 µM forskolin.
[35S]GTPγS Binding Assay
Cell membranes (5 µg D2L-Flp-In CHO or 20 µg rat
striatal tissue) were equilibrated for 60 min at 30 °C with varying
concentrations of ligands in binding buffer (20 mM HEPES, 10 mM MgCl2, 100 mM
NaCl 1 mM EGTA, 1 mM EDTA, 0.1% ascorbic acid, 1 mM DTT; pH 7.4) containing 3
µM or 10 µM GDP (D2L-Flp-In CHO or rat striatum,
respectively). [35S]GTPγS (0.1 nM) was added to a final volume of 0.2
mL (D2L-Flp-In CHO) or 1 mL (rat striatum) and membranes were incubated for
further 60 min at 30 °C. For experiments using D2L-Flp-In CHO
membranes 5 µg of saponin was added per assay point. For experiments using
D2L-Flp-In CHO membranes termination of [35S]GTPγS
binding was by rapid filtration with a Packard plate harvester onto 96-well GF/C filter
plates followed by three washes with ice cold 0.9% NaCl. Bound radioactivity was
measured in a Microbeta microplate counter (Perkin Elmer). For experiments using
membranes of rat striatal tissue reactions were terminated by fast flow filtration over
GF/B membranes using a Brandel Harvester followed by three washes with ice-cold
0.9% NaCl. Bound radioactivity was measured in a Tri-Carb 2900TR liquid
scintillation counter (Perkin Elmer). Data were normalized to the maximal response of
dopamine in the control condition.
[3H]spiperone binding assay
Experiments were performed using a methodology described previously[50].
β-arrestin recruitment
HEK293T cells were transfected with a 2:2:4 ratio of cDNA coding for
D2L-Rluc8, GRK2 and β-arrestin 2-YFP. Experiments were performed as
described previously[52]. Antagonists
were added 30 min prior to coelenterazine-h. Data were normalised to the maximal
response of dopamine in the control condition.
Aequorin complementation assay
Experiments were performed as described previously[15]. Data was normalized to the maximal response of dopamine
in the control condition.
Molecular Modeling
The binding modes of SB269652 and its tetrahydroisoquinoline core, THIQ7C,
were investigated with a D2R model stabilized by eticlopride that we
previously built based on the D3R structure and relaxed with MD
simulations[21,22]. To acquire a reference binding mode for THIQ7C in the
high-resolution structure of D3R (PDB: 3PBL)[21], THIQ7C in the protonated form was first docked to the
D3R structure with the induced-fit docking (IFD) protocol (Schrodinger,
Inc.)[53], and the lowest MM/GBSA
energy pose from the largest pose cluster was selected as the reference pose. Assuming
identical binding modes of THIQ7C in the near-identical orthosteric binding sites of
D3R and D2R, the pose from the IFD trial with our D2R
model that is closest to the reference pose in the D3R structure was
selected. The full-length SB269652 was then docked to the D2R model by a
core-constrained IFD protocol[22] with
restraints on the tetrahydroisoquinoline core (heavy-atom RMSD < 2.0 Å)
to the selected pose of THIQ7C in D2R. The resulting 27 docked poses were
grouped into three clusters with a ligand RMSD threshold of 5 Å, and a pose
having the lowest IFDScore[53] within
the largest cluster was selected as the representative pose of SB269652. The
representative binding pose of the cis-isomer of SB269652 (MIPS1217) in
the D2R model was similarly acquired. The ligand partial charges were
re-assigned using the QM-polarized ligand docking (QPLD) protocol[54] (Schrödinger Suite 2012) for this
representative pose. The D2R-SB269652 and D2R-MIPS1217 complexes
were then relaxed by molecular dynamics simulations in the lipid bilayer environment
using Desmond (version 3.0, D. E. Shaw Research, New York, NY, 2011)[55].
Data analysis
GraphPad Prism 6.0b (San Diego, CA) was used for all statistical analysis,
nonlinear regression, and simulations.
Analysis of radioligand binding experiments
For radioligand saturation binding data, the following equation was globally
fitted to nonspecific and total binding data:Where Y is radioligand binding, Bmax is the total receptor density,
[A] is the free radioligand concentration, KA is the
equilibrium dissociation constant of the radioligand, and NS is the fraction of
nonspecific radioligand binding.The interaction between [3H]spiperone and SB269652 in a saturation
assay was best fit by the following equation derived from the allosteric ternary complex
model:Where Y is specific binding, A is the radioligand ([3H]spiperone),
B is the allosteric modulator (SB269652), Bmax is the maximal concentration
of receptors labelled by the radioligand, KA and
KB the equilibrium dissociation constants for the
orthosteric and allosteric drugs, respectively; and α defines the cooperativity
between the radioligand and the allosteric modulator.Competition-binding curves between [3H]spiperone and dopamine in
the absence or presence of SB269652 were initially fitted to a one-site binding equation
and two-site binding equation followed by F-test analysis for best fit[56]. Subsequently, data of experiments using
membranes of WT D2R FlpIn CHO cells was fitted to the following allosteric
ternary complex model[57]:Where Y is percentage (vehicle control) binding, [A], [B], and [I] are the
concentrations of [3H]spiperone, SB269652, and dopamine, respectively,
KA and KB are the equilibrium
dissociation constants of [3H]spiperone and SB269652, respectively,
KHi and KLo are the
equilibrium dissociation constants of dopamine for the high- and low-affinity receptor
state, respectively, FracHi is the proportion of receptors in the
high-affinity receptor state, and α and α′ are the
cooperativities between SB269652 and [3H]spiperone or dopamine, respectively.
Values of α (or α ′) >1 denote positive cooperativity;
values <1 (but >0) denote negative cooperativity, and values = 1 denote
neutral cooperativity.Data from experiments using membranes of FlpIn CHO cells expressing the N
terminal c-myc tagged WT or Glu952.65Ala mutant D2R were best fit
to a one-site model[58]:Where KI is the equilibrium dissociation constant
of dopamine.Competition-binding curves between [3H]spiperone and SB269652 could
be fit to the allosteric ternary complex model using the following equation[18]:Where Y is percentage (vehicle control) binding; [A] and [B] are the
concentrations of [3H]spiperone and SB269652, respectively;
KA and KB are the equilibrium
dissociation constants of [3H]spiperone and SB269652, respectively; α
is the cooperativity between SB269652 and [3H]spiperone Values of α
>1 denote positive cooperativity; values <1 (but >0) denote
negative cooperativity, and values = 1 denote neutral cooperativity.
Analysis of functional data
All concentration response (C/R) data were fitted to the following modified
four-parameter Hill equation to derive potency estimates[56]:Where E is the effect of the system, nH is the Hillslope, and EC50
is the concentration of agonist [A] that gives the midpoint response between basal and
maximal effect of dopamine or other agonists (Emax), which are the lower and
upper asymptotes of the response, respectively.A logistic equation of competitive agonist-antagonist interaction was globally
fitted to data from functional experiments measuring the interaction between dopamine
and the various competitive antagonist fragments of SB269652, MIPS1217 or MIPS1500 at
the WT D2R [56]:Where s represents the Schild slope for the antagonist, and pA2
represents the negative logarithm of the molar concentration of antagonist necessary to
double the concentration of agonist needed to elicit the submaximal response obtained in
the absence of antagonist.For presentation purposes, we also used equation 3 values of EC50 for dopamine and other agonists
in the presence (A′) and absence (A) of modulator or competitive antagonist (B)
to generate concentration ratios (A′/A). Values of log(conc. ratio-1) on the
Y-axis were then plotted against corresponding values of log[B]. For data of ligands
with a competitive mode of interaction values of affinity
(pKB) were obtained using the equation for interactions
that gave a Schild slope not significantly different from unity:In contrast for ligands with an allosteric mode of interaction, data were fit
with the following equation, where αβ is the composite allosteric effect
on orthosteric ligand function[18]:Functional data describing the interaction between SB269652 and dopamine,
S-3PPP or aripiprazole at the WT or mutant D2Rs used in this study or
MIPS1500 at the Glu952.65Ala-D2R were globally analyzed according
to the allosteric ternary complex model[59].Where Em is the maximum possible cellular response, [A] and [B] are
the concentrations of orthosteric and allosteric ligands, respectively, and
KB is the equilibrium dissociation constant of the
allosteric ligand, αβ is a composite cooperativity parameter between the
orthosteric and allosteric ligand that includes effects upon orthosteric ligand affinity
and efficacy and nH is the Hill slope of the orthosteric agonist concentration-response
curve. Values of α and/or β greater than 1 denote allosteric
potentiation, whereas values less than 1 (but greater than 0) denote allosteric
inhibition.
Statistical Analysis
All data points and values shown in the figures and tables are the means
± SEM of at least 3 separate experiments performed in duplicate unless otherwise
stated. Statistically significant differences (taken at P < 0.05) between
pKB or Logαβ values were determined by
one-way ANOVA with a Bonferroni post-test or an unpaired Student’s t-test as
appropriate.
Chemical Synthesis and characterization of compounds: performed as described in the
Supplementary Note
Briefly, the synthesis of final compounds followed a general synthetic
procedure previously reported in the literature for the synthesis of
SB26965212. For the synthesis of MIPS1217, the commercially available
2-(cis-4-((tert-butoxycarbonyl)amino)cyclohexyl)acetic
acid was esterified using Steglich conditions, then converted to the aldehyde following
treatment with DIBAL-H. Reductive alkylation of the aldehyde and
7-cyano-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroisoquinoline in the presence of sodium triacetoxyborohydride
afforded tert-butyl
(cis-4-(2-(7-cyano-3,4-dihydroisoquinolin-2(1H)-yl)ethyl)cyclohexyl)carbamate,
which was subsequently deprotected using trifluoroacetic acid (TFA) to give the free
amine, following alkaline work-up. Finally, coupling of the free amine with
indole-2-carboxylic acid in the presence of Castro’s reagent
((benzotriazol-1-yloxy)tris(dimethylamino)phosphonium hexafluorophosphate) afforded
MIPS1217.The synthesis of MIPS1500 followed the same general synthetic procedure as for
the synthesis of SB269652. However, in the final coupling step, indole-2-carboxylic acid
was replaced with 1-methyl-1H–indole-2-carboxylic acid, and
HCTU
(O-(6-chlorobenzotriazol-1-yl)-N,N,N′,N′-tetramethyluronium
hexafluorophosphate) used as the coupling reagent, to give MIPS1500.
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