| Literature DB >> 31031627 |
Alaeddine Djillani1, Jean Mazella1, Catherine Heurteaux1, Marc Borsotto1.
Abstract
TREK-1 is the most studied background K2P channel. Its main role is to control cell excitability and maintain the membrane potential below the threshold of depolarization. TREK-1 is multi-regulated by a variety of physical and chemical stimuli which makes it a very promising and challenging target in the treatment of several pathologies. It is mainly expressed in the brain but also in heart, smooth muscle cells, endocrine pancreas, and prostate. In the nervous system, TREK-1 is involved in many physiological and pathological processes such as depression, neuroprotection, pain, and anesthesia. These properties explain why many laboratories and pharmaceutical companies have been focusing their research on screening and developing highly efficient modulators of TREK-1 channels. In this review, we summarize the different roles of TREK-1 that have been investigated so far in attempt to characterize pharmacological tools and new molecules to modulate cellular functions controlled by TREK-1.Entities:
Keywords: K2P; TREK-1; arrhythmia; ion channel; modulators; neurological disorders; potassium
Year: 2019 PMID: 31031627 PMCID: PMC6470294 DOI: 10.3389/fphar.2019.00379
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Pharmacol ISSN: 1663-9812 Impact factor: 5.810
FIGURE 1Structure and classification of K2P channels. The family of K2P channels is composed of 15 members grouped in six subfamilies. K2P channels are two-pore domain potassium channels and the most recent class of K+ channels discovered. They assemble as dimers of four transmembrane segments (M1–M4) and two-pore domain (P1 and P2). They have an extended M1-P1 extracellular loop and cytosolic N- and C-termini. K2P channels have a unique pore signature sequence Gly-Tyr(Phe)-Gly in the 1st pore (P1) and Gly-Leu(Phe)-Gly in the 2nd pore (P2).
FIGURE 2Polymodal TREK-1 regulation. TREK-1 is multiregulated by a variety of physical and chemical stimuli. TREK-1 possesses different protein partners such as AKAP150, β-COP, Mtap2, and sortilin. Sortilin interacts with TREK-1 an address it to the plasma membrane. Spadin is a synthetic peptide derived from sortilin which was shown to block TREK-1 with high affinity. Spadin antidepressant activity appears to be mediated through PI3K and Akt activation. TREK-1 is involved in numerous CNS pathologies such as depression, ischemia, epilepsy and pain.
FIGURE 3Key milestones in discovery of TREK-1 channels. The scheme presents the major dates from the cloning of TREK-1 channels to the discovery of its role in physiology and pathology. AA, arachidonic acid; GPCR, G-protein Coupled Receptor; STAR∗D, Sequenced Treatment Alternatives to Relieve Depression. Green and Red triangles represent TREK-1 activation and inhibition processes, respectively.
TREK-1 blockers.
| Molecule | IC50 | Cell type | Specificity | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Peptides | Spadin (PE 12–28) | 70 nM | COS, HEK, hTREK-1/HEK | Specific for TREK-1 channels, no effect on TREK-2, TRAAK, TASK or TRESK channels | |
| PE 22–28 | 0.12 nM | hTREK-1/HEK | |||
| Biotin-PE 22–28 | nd | hTREK-1/HEK | |||
| G/A-PE 22–28 | 0.1 nM | hTREK-1/HEK | |||
| Biotin-G/A-PE 22–28 | 1.2 nM | hTREK-1/HEK | |||
| SSRIs | Fluoxetine | 19 μM | tsA 201 cells | Antagonize TREK-2 (IC50 = 28.7 ± 7.6 μM), SERT (Ki = 0.07 μM), NAT (Ki = 8–10 μM) and Nav1.5 (IC50 = 39.4 ± 2 μM) | |
| Norfluoxetine | 9 μM | tsA 201 cells | Blocks TREK-2 (IC50 = 4.9 ± 0.5 μM), Nav1.5 (IC50 = 29.5 ± 1 μM) | ||
| Paroxetine | 20 μM tested | HEK293 cells | blocks TREK-2 (at 20 μM tested), SERT (Kd = 0.13 nM), GIRK and Kv3.1 | ||
| Citalopram | 100 μM tested | HEK293 cells | blocks TREK-2 (at 100 μM tested), SERT, Kv1.5 (IC50 = 2.8 ± 1.1 μM) and L-type Ca2+ channels (IC50 = 60.3 ± 8.5 μM) | ||
| Escitalopram | 81.94 μM | HEK293 cells | nd | ||
| Antipsychotics | Fluphenazine | 4.7 μM | COS cells | Block TREK-2 (at 10 μM tested), no effect on TRAAK channels at 10 μM | |
| Chlorpromazine | 2.7 μM | ||||
| Haloperidol | 5.5 μM | ||||
| Flupenthixol | 2 μM | ||||
| Loxapine | 19.7 μM | ||||
| Pimozide | 1.8 μM | ||||
| Clozapine | 10 μM tested | ||||
| DHP Ca2+ channel antagonists | Amlodipine | 0.43 μM | Bovine AZF | Block L-type Ca2+-channels | |
| Niguldipine | 0.75 μM | ||||
| Other TREK-1 blockers | SID1900 | 29.72 μM | HEK293 cells | nd | |
| l-NBP, d-NBP, ld-NBP | 0.06 ± 0.03 μM | CHO cells | nd | ||
| L-methionine | 1 mM | Bladder smooth muscle | nd | ||
| Lig4-4 | 2.06 μM | CHO cells | Blocks Kv2.1, Kv1.5, Kv3.1, hERG and neuronal Na+ and Ca2+channels (IC50 = 30 μM) | ||
TREK-1 activators.
| Molecule | EC50 | Cell type | Specificity | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neuroprotective agents | Riluzole | Transient activation (100 μM tested) | COS cells | Activates TRAAK (EC50∼60 μM), blocks TTX-sensitive (IC50 = 90 μM) and TTX-resistant (IC50 = 143 μM) sodium channels. It antagonizes Ca2+ entry induced by glutamic acid (IC50 = 0.30 ± 0.07 μM) or by NMDA (IC50 = 12.8 ± 2.4 μM). Riluzole inhibits glutamate release in the caudate nucleus (10 μM tested) and the hippocampus (10–30 μM tested) | |
| Mood stabilizers | Lithium | Maximum of activation at 1 mM | HEK293 cells | nd | |
| Gabapentin | 100μM tested | nd | |||
| Valproate | 100 μM tested | nd | |||
| Carbamazepine | Maximum of activation at 100 μM | nd | |||
| Carbazole-based | ML67 | EC50 = 213 ± 1.2 μM | Xenopus oocytes | Activates TREK-2 (EC50∼250 μM) and TRAAK | |
| ML67-33 | EC50 = 36.3 ± 1 μM | Xenopus oocytes | Activates TREK-2 (EC50 = 30.2 ± 1.4 μM) and TRAAK (EC50 = 27.3 ± 1.2 μM) | ||
| EC50 = 9.7 ± 1.2 μM | HEK293 | ||||
| ML335 | EC50 = 14.3 ± 2.7 μM | Xenopus oocytes | Activates TREK-2 (EC50 = 5.2 ± 0.5 μM), no effect on TRAAK | ||
| EC50 = 5.2 ± 0.8 μM | HEK293 | ||||
| ML402 | EC50 = 13.7 ± 7 μM | Xenopus oocytes | Activates TREK-2 (EC50 = 5.9 ± 1.6 μM), no effect on TRAAK | ||
| EC50 = 5.9 ± 1.6 μM | HEK293 | ||||
| Polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) | Arachidonic acid | (0.1–10 μM) tested | COS cells | Activates TREK-2 (1–10 μM), no effect on TRAAK (0.01–100 μM) | |
| General volatile anesthetics | Chloroform | (0.2–1.6 mM) | COS cells | Selective for TREK-1 | |
| Halothane | (0.04–4 mM) | Activates TASK channels | |||
| Isoflurane | 2 mM tested | Activates TASK channels | |||
| Diethyl ether | 0.8 mM tested | Decrease TASK channel activity | |||
| Analgesics (NSAIDs) | Fenamate | EC50∼100 μM | COS cells | Activates TREK-2 (EC50∼100 μM) and TRAAK (>100 μM) | |
| Flufenamic acid | 250 ± 35% at 100 μM | TsA201 cells | nd | ||
| Tetrazole-based | BL-1249 | EC50 = 1.49 ± 0.08 μM | Cultured human urinary bladder myocytes | nd | |
| EC50 = 2 ± 2 μM | Pancreatic ductal adenocarcinoma | nd | |||
TREK-1 in CNS pathologies.
| Pathology | TREK-1 expression | Potential treatment | References | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Immunofluorescence | mRNA | Protein | |||
| Depression | nd | nd | ↑ in the frontal cortex 3 weeks after CMS in rat No change in the hippocampus | TREK-1 blockers as potential treatment in depression | |
| Fluoxetine per os daily for 3 weeks | |||||
| Reverse TREK-1 overexpression in the frontal cortex | |||||
| Ischemia | Broad distribution in the cortex and CA1 (glia and neurons) | ↑ in the hippocampus at 3 and 30 days after BCAL | in the hippocampus 7 and 30 days after MCAO | TREK-1 openers as potential treatment in ischemia | |
| ↑ in the cortex and the hippocampus after 3, 7, and 30 days after MCAO | |||||
| Pain perception | TREK-1 expression in DRG sensory neurons | ↑ in DRG of CCI mice | ↑ in DRG of CCI mice | TREK-1 openers as potential analgesics | |
| Post-stroke depression | Broad distribution in PFC, CA1, CA3, and DG | ||||
| ↑ in PFC, CA3 and DG | ↑ in PFC, CA1, CA3 and DG | TREK-1 blockers as potential treatment in PSD | |||
| ↓ in PFC, CA3 and DG | ↓ in PFC, CA1,CA3 and DG | ||||