| Literature DB >> 26451468 |
Eyup Akgün1, Muhammad I Javed1, Mary M Lunzer1, Michael D Powers1, Yuk Y Sham1, Yoshikazu Watanabe1, Philip S Portoghese1.
Abstract
Chemokine release promotes cross-talk between opioid and chemokine receptors that in part leads to reduced efficacy of morphine in the treatment of chronic pain. On the basis of the possibility that a MOR-CCR5 heteromer is involved in such cross-talk, we have synthesized bivalent ligands (MCC series) that contain mu opioid agonist and CCR5 antagonist pharmacophores linked through homologous spacers (14-24 atoms). When tested on lipopolysaccharide-inflamed mice, a member of the series (MCC22; 3e) with a 22-atom spacer exhibited profound antinociception (i.t. ED50 = 0.0146 pmol/mouse) that was 2000× greater than morphine. Moreover, MCC22 was ~3500× more potent than a mixture of mu agonist and CCR5 antagonist monovalent ligands. These data strongly suggest that MCC22 acts by bridging the protomers of a MOR-CCR5 heteromer having a TM5,6 interface. Molecular simulation studies are consistent with such bridging. This study supports the MOR-CCR5 heteromer as a novel target for the treatment of chronic pain.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26451468 PMCID: PMC5055304 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b01245
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446