| Literature DB >> 31752279 |
Paul Cumming1,2, János Marton3, Tuomas O Lilius4, Dag Erlend Olberg5, Axel Rominger1.
Abstract
The discovery of endogenous peptide ligands for morphine binding sites occurred in parallel with the identification of three subclasses of opioid receptor (OR), traditionally designated as μ, δ, and κ, along with the more recently defined opioid-receptor-like (ORL1) receptor. Early efforts in opioid receptor radiochemistry focused on the structure of the prototype agonist ligand, morphine, although N-[methyl-11C]morphine, -codeine and -heroin did not show significant binding in vivo. [11C]Diprenorphine ([11C]DPN), an orvinol type, non-selective OR antagonist ligand, was among the first successful PET tracers for molecular brain imaging, but has been largely supplanted in research studies by the μ-preferring agonist [11C]carfentanil ([11C]Caf). These two tracers have the property of being displaceable by endogenous opioid peptides in living brain, thus potentially serving in a competition-binding model. Indeed, many clinical PET studies with [11C]DPN or [11C]Caf affirm the release of endogenous opioids in response to painful stimuli. Numerous other PET studies implicate μ-OR signaling in aspects of human personality and vulnerability to drug dependence, but there have been very few clinical PET studies of μORs in neurological disorders. Tracers based on naltrindole, a non-peptide antagonist of the δ-preferring endogenous opioid enkephalin, have been used in PET studies of δORs, and [11C]GR103545 is validated for studies of κORs. Structures such as [11C]NOP-1A show selective binding at ORL-1 receptors in living brain. However, there is scant documentation of δ-, κ-, or ORL1 receptors in healthy human brain or in neurological and psychiatric disorders; here, clinical PET research must catch up with recent progress in radiopharmaceutical chemistry.Entities:
Keywords: drug dependence; epilepsy; movement disorders; opioid receptors; pain; positron emission tomography; radiotracers; μOR-, δOR-, κOR- and ORL1-ligands
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31752279 PMCID: PMC6891617 DOI: 10.3390/molecules24224190
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Molecules ISSN: 1420-3049 Impact factor: 4.411
Figure 1Chemical structures of endogenous opioid peptides and selected opioid receptor ligands.
Figure 2Human brain opioid receptor PET images in coronal (upper row) and axial (lower row) planes. Modified and reproduced with permission from Peciña et al. [19]. From left to right, we see (A) the µOR agonist [11C]carfentanil, binding most abundantly in the caudate nucleus, anterior cingulate cortex, thalamus, and pituitary gland; (B) the δOR antagonist N1′-([11C]methyl)natrindole, which has diffuse binding throughout neocortex; (C) the κOR antagonist [11C]LY2795050, which has high binding in the insular cortex, lateral frontal cortex and amygdala; (D) the NOP antagonist [11C]NOP-1A, which binds abundantly throughout the brain. Binding sites of µ-, κ- and NOP-OR ligands are expressed as binding potential relative to the cerebellum (BPND), whereas binding of the δ-ligand (which has no non-binding reference region) is expressed as net influx (K,) in units of perfusion (mL cm−3 min−1). The color scale in the lower right indicates (for A, C, and D) BPND ranging from 0 to 2, or (B) K ranging from 0–0.1 mL cm−3 min−1
Figure 3Structures of µ-selective and non-selective opioid receptor radioligands.
Binding profile of selected ligands at the human opioid receptors [51] .
| Ligand | Ki [nM] | Action | Compound Class | Ref. | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| μ-OR | δ-OR | κ-OR | NOP | ||||
| Met5-enkephalin | 261 | 9.9 | - | - | agonist δOR | EOP | Stefanucci [ |
| Leu5-enkephalin | 513 | 10.7 | - | - | agonist δOR | EOP | Stefanucci [ |
| β-Endorphin | 2.1 | 2.4 | 96 | - | agonist μOR, κOR | EOP | Corbett [ |
| Dinorphin A | 1.6 | 1.25 | 0.05 | 386 | agonist κOR | EOP | Zhang [ |
| Nociceptin | 437 | 2846 | 147 | 0.08 | agonist | EOP | Cami-Cobeci [ |
| Morphine | 2.06 | >10,000 | 134 | >10,000 | agonist μOR | EM | Valenzano [ |
| Oxycodone | 16 | 7680 | 43,000 | - | agonist μOR | EM | Miyazaki [ |
| Naltrexone | 0.62 | 12.3 | 1.88 | - | antagonist | EM | Zheng [ |
| Carfentanil | 0.07 | - | - | - | agonist μOR | 4-AP | Henriksen [ |
| Carfentanila | 0.051 | 4.7 | 13 | - | agonist μOR | 4-AP | Frost [ |
| Carfentanilb | 0.024 | 3.28 | 43.1 | - | agonist μOR | 4-AP | Cometta [ |
| Cyclofoxya | 2.62 | 89 | 9.3 | - | antagonist μOR, κOR | EM | Rothman [ |
| DPN | 0.07 | 0.23 | 0.02 | - | antagonist | orvinol | Raynor [ |
| BPN | 1.5 | 6.1 | 2.5 | 77.4 | partial μOR agonist, κOR antagonist | orvinol | Cami-Cobeci [ |
| PEO | 0.18 | 5.1 | 0.12 | - | full agonist | orvinol | Marton [ |
| FE-DPN | 0.24 | 8.00 | 0.20 | - | antagonist | orvinol | Schoultz [ |
| FE-BPN | 0.24 | 2.10 | 0.12 | - | mixed agonist/antagonist | orvinol | Schoultz [ |
| FE-PEO | 0.10 | 0.49 | 0.08 | - | full agonist | orvinol | Schoultz [ |
| NTIb | 3.8 | 0.03 | 332 | - | antagonist δOR | EM | Portoghese [ |
| MeNTIb | 14 | 0.02 | 65 | - | antagonist δOR | EM | Portoghese [ |
| GR103545 | 16.2 | 536 | 0.02 | - | agonist κOR | ArAP | Schoultz [ |
| LY2459989a | 7.68 | 91.3 | 0.18 | - | antagonist κOR | APPB | Zheng [ |
| LY2795050 | 25.8 | 153 | 0.72 | - | antagonist κOR | APPB | Zheng [ |
| FEKAP | 7.4 | 139 | 0.43 | - | agonist κOR | ArAP | Li [ |
| EKAP | 8.6 | 386 | 0.28 | - | agonist | ArAP | Li [ |
| MeJDTic | 8.88 | 118 | 1.01 | - | antagonist κOR | JDTic | Poisnel [ |
| Salvinorin A | >1000 | 5790 | 1.9 | - | agonist κOR | NND | Harding [ |
| NOP-1A | - | - | - | 0.15 | antagonist NOP | FDPTP | Pike [ |
| MK-0911 | 94 | - | - | 0.6 | antagonist NOP | SPB | Hostetler [ |
EOP: Endogenous opioid peptide, EM: 4,5-Eopxy-morphinan, 4-AP: 4-Anilidopiperidine, orvinol: 6,14-ethenomorphinan, Bentley-compound, ArAP: Arylacetamidopiperazine, APPB: Aryl- phenylpyrrolidinylmethyl-phenoxy-benzamide, JDTic: trans-3,4-dimethyl-4-(3-hydroxyphenyl)- piperidine, NND: “non nitrogenous” diterpene, FDPTP: 2′-fluoro-4′,5′-dihydrospiro[piperidine- 4,7′-thieno [2,3-c]pyran]- derivative, SPB: [[spiro[2.5]octan-8-yl]-methyl]piperidin-4-yl] benzimidazol-2-one, a: in the rat brain b: in guinea pig brain membranes.
Figure 4Labeled δ-opioid receptor ligands.
Figure 5Selected κOR ligands.
Figure 6Chemical structures of selected ORL1 receptor ligands.
A summary of the key results with opioid PET in clinical research.
| Condition | Ligand | Main Finding | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Healthy aging | [11C]Caf ( | 20% decrease in frontal cortex (females) | [ |
| Epilepsy | [11C]Caf ( | Increased in ipsilateral temporal lobe, decreased in amygdala | [ |
| Epilepsy | [11C]DPN ( | No change | [ |
| Parkinson’s disease | [11C]DPN ( | 20–30% decrease in striatum and thalamus only in those patients with iatrogenic DOPA-dyskinesia | [ |
| Huntington’s disease | [11C]DPN ( | 30% reduced in caudate/putamen | [ |
| Pontine infarct central pain | [11C]DPN ( | Reduced throughout pain network | [ |
| Capsaicin-induced acute pain | [11C]Caf ( | Up to 50% decrease contralateral thalamus, in proportion to subjective severity | [ |
| Sustained painful stimulus of the jaw muscle with saline injection | [11C]Caf ( | Blateral decrease in binding in the ipsilateral amygdala (5%) and contralateral ventro-lateral thalamus (7%) | [ |
| painful heat | [11C]Caf ( | Placebo effect on binding changes | [ |
| Acupuncture therapy with sham acupuncture control | [11C]Caf ( | Persistent 10–30% increases in µ-OR binding in pain-related brain regions | [ |
| Harm avoidance trait in healthy males | [18F]FE-DPN ( | Trait correlated positively with binding in vental striatum, suggesting link with substance abuse | [ |
| Correlation with BOLD signal responses A large group of healthy women, binding. to viewing emotionally arousing scenes | [11C]Caf ( | Negative correlation in amygdala, hippocampus, thalamus, and hypothalamus | [ |
| Major depressive disorder | [11C]GR103545 ( | No difference from controls | [ |
| Detoxified cocaine addicts | [11C]Caf ( | Increased in frontal and cingulate cortex, which correlated with the extent of craving | [ |
| Detoxified alcohol-dependent subjects | [11C]MeNTI ( | Globally 10–20% increased binding inverse relationship in some regions with intensity of craving | [ |
| Obesity (BMI > 40) | [11C]Caf ( | Globally 20% lower compared to lean volunteers | [ |
| Feeding, regardless of the hedonic experience in non-obese subjects | [11C]Caf ( | Widespread decreases in binding | [ |