| Literature DB >> 30405350 |
Nicole M Fisher1, Mabel Seto1, Craig W Lindsley1,2, Colleen M Niswender1,3.
Abstract
Neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs) are characterized by a wide range of symptoms including delayed speech, intellectual disability, motor dysfunction, social deficits, breathing problems, structural abnormalities, and epilepsy. Unfortunately, current treatment strategies are limited and innovative new approaches are sorely needed to address these complex diseases. The metabotropic glutamate receptors are a class of G protein-coupled receptors that act to modulate neurotransmission across many brain structures. They have shown great promise as drug targets for numerous neurological and psychiatric diseases. Moreover, the development of subtype-selective allosteric modulators has allowed detailed studies of each receptor subtype. Here, we focus on the metabotropic glutamate receptor 7 (mGlu7) as a potential therapeutic target for NDDs. mGlu7 is expressed widely throughout the brain in regions that correspond to the symptom domains listed above and has established roles in synaptic physiology and behavior. Single nucleotide polymorphisms and mutations in the GRM7 gene have been associated with idiopathic autism and other NDDs in patients. In rodent models, existing literature suggests that decreased mGlu7 expression and/or function may lead to symptoms that overlap with those of NDDs. Furthermore, potentiation of mGlu7 activity has shown efficacy in a mouse model of Rett syndrome. In this review, we summarize current findings that provide rationale for the continued development of mGlu7 modulators as potential therapeutics.Entities:
Keywords: ASD; GRM7; Rett syndrome; allosteric modulator; mGlu7; neurodevelopmental disorder
Year: 2018 PMID: 30405350 PMCID: PMC6206046 DOI: 10.3389/fnmol.2018.00387
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Mol Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5099 Impact factor: 5.639
Summary of current tool compounds used to study mGlu7.
| Name (#) | Type | mGlu7 pEC50/pIC50 | mGlu8 pEC50/pIC50 | mGlu4 pEC50/pIC50 | mGlu6 pEC50/pIC50 | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| L-AP4 | Orthosteric agonist | 3.47 (PIH) | 6.53 (PIH) | 7.00 (PIH) | 5.62 (PIH) | |
| 3.61 (Ca2+) | 6.53 (Ca2+) | 6.89 (Ca2+) | 6.00 (Ca2+) | |||
| LSP4-2022 | Orthosteric agonist | 4.34 (Ca2+) | 4.54 (Ca2+) | 6.96 (Ca2+) | 5.36 (Ca2+) | |
| LSP1-2111 | Orthosteric agonist | 4.28 (PIH) | 4.18 (PIH) | 5.66 (PIH) | 5.77 (PIH) | |
| 4.00 (Ca2+) | 4.71 (Ca2+) | 6.05 (Ca2+) | 5.49 (Ca2+) | |||
| LSP2-9166 | 5.71 (Ca2+) | 4.25 (Ca2+) | 7.22 (Ca2+) | Not reported | ||
| VU0422288 | Group III PAM | 6.85 (Ca2+) | 6.93 (Ca2+) | 6.98 (Ca2+) | Not reported | |
| VU0155094 | Group III PAM | 5.80 (Ca2+) | 6.07 (Ca2+) | 5.48 (Ca2+) | Not reported | |
| ADX88178 | mGlu4/8 PAM | >4.52 (Ca2+) | 5.66 (Ca2+) | 8.46 (Ca2+) | >5 | |
| ADX71743 | mGlu7 NAM | 7.20 (human, Ca2+) | Inactive | Inactive | Inactive | |
| 7.06 (rat, Ca2+) | Inactive | Inactive | Inactive | |||
| AMN082 | Allosteric agonist | 6.59 (GTPγS) | >5 (GTPγS) | >5 (GTPγS) | >5 (GTPγS) | |
| XAP044 | Antagonist | 5.26 (cAMP) | 4.48 (cAMP) | Inactive | Inactive | |
| 5.55 to 5.46 (GTPγS) | ||||||
| LY341495 | Orthosteric antagonist | 6.00 (cAMP) | 6.76 (cAMP) | 4.66 (cAMP) | Not reported | |
| MMPIP | mGlu7 NAM | 6.66 (cAMP) | >5 (cAMP) | >5 (cAMP) | Not reported | |
| 7.15 (Ca2+) | ||||||
| 6.14 (Thallium) | ||||||
| VU6010608 | mGlu7 NAM | 6.12 (Ca2+) | >5 (Ca2+) | >5 (Ca2+) | Inactive (>5) | |
| VU6005649 | mGlu7/8 PAM | 6.19 (Ca2+) | 5.59 (Ca2+) | >5 (Ca2+) | Inactive | |
FIGURE 1Current tool compounds used to study mGlu7.
Summary of GRM7 mutations identified in NDD patients.
| Type | Chromosome 3 position | Nucleotide/protein change NM_00844.3 | Location in transcript NM_00844.3 | Zygosity | Phenotype | Source |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Duplication | 6209671–6981117 | 5′ UTR and Exon 1 | Heterozygous | Behavioral abnormality, ID | DECIPHER 289768 | |
| Point mutation | 6861849 | c.T461T > C p.I154T | Exon 1 | Homozygous | Developmental delay, seizures, hypotonia, atrophy, thin corpus callosum | |
| Deletion | 7053179–7144453 | Intron 1/2 and Exon 2 | Heterozygous | ASD | ||
| Deletion | 70664629–7172715 | Exon 2 | Heterozygous | ASD | ||
| Deletion | 7065422–7172715 | Exon 2 | Heterozygous | ASD | ||
| Deletion | 7257514–7442882 | Exons 3–5 | Heterozygous | Global developmental delay | DECIPHER 356330 | |
| Deletion | 7221090–7524552 | Exons 3–7 | Heterozygous | ASD | ||
| Point mutation | 7578663 | c.1757 G > A p.W586∗ | Exon 8 | Homozygous | Developmental delay, ID, microcephaly, seizures, leukodystrophy | |
| Point mutation | 7578771 | c.1865 G > A p.R622Q | Exon 8 | Heterozygous | ASD | |
| Point mutation | 7578878, 7578930 | c.1972C > T p.R658W, c.2024C > A p.T675K | Exon 8 | Compound Heterozygous | Developmental delay, ID, hypotonia, hypomyelination, brain atrophy, seizures | |
| Duplication | 7509664–7878406 | Exons 8–10 | Heterozygous | ID, microcephaly | DECIPHER 288108 | |