| Literature DB >> 32679900 |
Bruno Bragança1,2, Paulo Correia-de-Sá1.
Abstract
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is a primordial versatile autacoid that changes its role from an intracellular energy saver to a signaling molecule once released to the extracellular milieu. Extracellular ATP and its adenosine metabolite are the main activators of the P2 and P1 purinoceptor families, respectively. Mounting evidence suggests that the ionotropic P2X4 receptor (P2X4R) plays pivotal roles in the regulation of the cardiovascular system, yet further therapeutic advances have been hampered by the lack of selective P2X4R agonists. In this review, we provide the state of the art of the P2X4R activity in the cardiovascular system. We also discuss the role of P2X4R activation in kidney and lungs vis a vis their interplay to control cardiovascular functions and dysfunctions, including putative adverse effects emerging from P2X4R activation. Gathering this information may prompt further development of selective P2X4R agonists and its translation to the clinical practice.Entities:
Keywords: ATP; P2X4 receptor; cardiovascular system
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32679900 PMCID: PMC7404342 DOI: 10.3390/ijms21145005
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Mol Sci ISSN: 1422-0067 Impact factor: 5.923
Pharmacology of the P2X4 receptor.
| Compound | EC50 or IC50 (µM) * | P2X Cross-Reactivity/Fold Selectivity | References | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Human | Rat | Mouse | ||||
|
| ATP | 0.7–5.7 | 1.7–16.2 | 0.3–2.3 | [ | |
| ATPγS | 10.9 | [ | ||||
| 2-meSATP | 0.3–2.2 | ~ 1–10 | 1.4 | [ | ||
| CTP | ~0.1–1 mM | P2X1,2,3,7 | [ | |||
| BzATP | 0.5–9.4 | >100 | 2.9 | P2X7 (h) | [ | |
| α,β-meATP | 0.8–19 | ≥100 | 7–>100 | P2X1,3 | [ | |
| β,γ-meATP | >100 | >100 | >100 | [ | ||
| AP4AƔ | 0.1-3 | 20–>100 | 2.6–>100 | [ | ||
| AR-C67085MX | 2.5 | >100 | >100 | [ | ||
| 8-Azido-ATP | >100 | >100 | >100 | [ | ||
| β,γ-Imido-ATP | 6.5 | >100 | >100 | [ | ||
| MRS-2339 | [ | |||||
| MRS-2978 | [ | |||||
| PSB-0412 | 2.1 | [ | ||||
|
| PPADS | 9.6–>100 | >300 | >100 | [ | |
| Suramin | >100 | >100 | >100 | [ | ||
| KN-62 | >10 | >10 | >10 | [ | ||
| TNP-ATP | 1.5 | 1.3–4.71 | 1.3–4.2 | P2X1,2,3,7 | [ | |
| Brilliant Blue G | 3–100 | 1000-fold more potent at P2X7 (r) | [ | |||
| 5-BDBD | 0.3–1.2 | 0.75–3.5 | 2.04 | 10-fold P2X1 (r), 3-fold P2X3 (r) | [ | |
| BX-430 | 0.54–1 | 10 to 100-fold P2X1,3,5,7 | [ | |||
| Carbamazepine der. † | 3.44 | 54.6 | 14.9 | 2 to 30-fold P2X1,2,3,7 (h) | [ | |
| PSB-12054 | 0.19 | 2.10 | 1.8 | ≥50-fold P2X1,2,3,7 (h) | [ | |
| PSB-12062 | 1.4 | 0.9 | 1.8 | ≥35-fold P2X1,2,3,7 (h) | [ | |
| PSB-15417 | 10 ‡ | >5-fold P2X7 (h) | [ | |||
| NP-1815-PX | 0.26 | P2X1,2,3,7 | [ | |||
| NC-2600 Ʊ | [ | |||||
| UoS14919 | 61 nM | [ | ||||
| Paroxetine | 1.87–4.8 | 1.64–2.45 | 0.7 | [ | ||
| Duloxetine | 1.59–17 | [ | ||||
| BAY-1797 | 0.2 | [ | ||||
| IgG#151-LO || | 0.7 | 10,000-fold more potent over other P2X | [ | |||
|
| Ivermectin | 0.1 | P2X7 (h) | [ | ||
| Cibacron blue | >300 | [ | ||||
| Ginsenosides | 7.5–10.5 | P2X7 | [ | |||
| Testosterone butyrate | 30 ‡ | P2X2 | [ | |||
| Zn2+ | 1.8 | [ | ||||
| Cd2+ | 7.3 | [ | ||||
| Alfaxalone | 0.4–1.6 | [ | ||||
| Allopregnanolone | 0.4 | [ | ||||
| Propofol | 56 | [ | ||||
|
| Ethanol | 5–200 mM ‡ | PAM at rat P2X3 | [ | ||
| H + | pKa ~6.8 | inhibits P2X1,3,4; stimulates P2X2 | [ | |||
| Hg2+ | 9 | [ | ||||
| Cu2+ | 8.6 | [ | ||||
| Fluvastatin ¥ | 10 for 1 h | [ | ||||
| Filipin III ¥ | 10 for 30 min | [ | ||||
| Methyl-β-cyclodextrin ¥ | 10 mM, 1 h | [ | ||||
| t-DCA § | 160 | [ | ||||
Data are mostly from functional studies (e.g., electrophysiological currents, intracellular calcium oscillations) in heterologous systems expressing human (h), rat (r) or mouse (m) P2X4 receptors. * Potency of agonists and positive allosteric modulators (PAM) is represented as half maximal effective concentration (EC50), whereas for antagonists and negative modulators (NM) indicated is the half maximal inhibitory concentration (IC50). EC50 and IC50 values are in µM, unless stated otherwise. Ɣ AP4A, adenosine tetraphosphate. † N,N-diisopropyl-5H-dibenzo[b,f]azepine-5-carboxamide. Ʊ NC-2600 is a specific P2X4 antagonist from Chemifar, with unknown structure and selectivity, currently in phase I clinical trial for neuropathic pain. ‡ Potency not calculated, it indicates the concentration of the compound used to produce the functional effect. ¥ Activity suppressed by cholesterol depletion. § Tauro-deoxycholic acid (t-DCA). || Mouse antibody anti-P2X4 IgG#151-LO.
Figure 1Schematic overview of systemic P2X4R stimulation. An overall cardioprotective effect is observed with P2X4R stimulation. Permeation of Na+ and Ca2+ ions through P2X4R interferes with the forward mode of the Na+-Ca2+ exchanger (NCX) and Ca2+-dependent activation of endothelial nitric oxide synthase (eNOS) (right panels). In the heart, stimulation of P2X4R improves cardiac muscle contraction and optimizes myocardial energy supply vs. demand by reducing chronotropy. The diuretic effect of P2X4R activation together with its vasodilation properties in both systemic and pulmonary arteries optimizes preload and afterload and, thereby, cardiac output in HF. Chronic activation of the P2X4R reverses maladaptive cardiac remodeling and improves the outcome of HF. Future P2X4R agonist therapies must deal with the wide P2X4R distribution throughout the human body resulting in putative unwanted side-effects (marked in orange). Figure composition used elements from Servier Medical Art (https://smart.servier.com).