| Literature DB >> 33274688 |
Taygun C Uzuneser1,2, Eva-Maria Weiss1, Jana Dahlmanns1, Liubov S Kalinichenko1, Davide Amato1,3, Johannes Kornhuber1, Christian Alzheimer4, Jan Hellmann5, Jonas Kaindl5, Harald Hübner5, Stefan Löber5, Peter Gmeiner5, Teja W Grömer1, Christian P Müller1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The therapeutic effects of antipsychotic drugs (APDs) are mainly attributed to their postsynaptic inhibitory functions on the dopamine D2 receptor, which, however, cannot explain the delayed onset of full therapeutic efficacy. It was previously shown that APDs accumulate in presynaptic vesicles during chronic treatment and are released like neurotransmitters in an activity-dependent manner triggering an auto-inhibitory feedback mechanism. Although closely mirroring therapeutic action onset, the functional consequence of the APD accumulation process remained unclear. AIMS: Here we tested whether the accumulation of the APD haloperidol (HAL) is required for full therapeutic action in psychotic-like rats.Entities:
Keywords: Haloperidol; behavior; presynaptic accumulation; schizophrenia
Year: 2020 PMID: 33274688 PMCID: PMC7770212 DOI: 10.1177/0269881120965908
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Psychopharmacol ISSN: 0269-8811 Impact factor: 4.153
Figure 1.Development and validation of the non-accumulating haloperidol (HAL) analog HAL-F with preserved dopamine D2 receptor affinity: (a) chemical structure of HAL-F; (b) ligand receptor interactions of HAL (green) and HAL-F (orange) with the dopamine D2 receptor (blue). HAL-F binds to dopamine receptors in the same manner as HAL, despite carrying the large polar appendage attached to the HAL scaffold.
Figure 2.Synthesis of the haloperidol analog HAL-F.
Receptor binding profile of haloperidol (HAL) and the non-accumulating analog HAL-F for human dopamine receptor subtypes.
| Ki value (nM), mean ± SEM[ | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [3H]SCH23390 | [3H]spiperone | ||||
| Compound | D1 | D2L | D2S | D3 | D4.4 |
| HAL | 5.9 ± 1.2 | 0.64 ± 0.42 | 0.83 ± 0.27 | 3.1 ± 0.89 | 6.1 ± 1.4 |
| HAL-F | 3600 ± 1000 | 30 ± 5.4 | 13 ± 4.1 | 68 ± 13 | 2800 ± 430 |
Ki values derived from 4 to 9 individual experiments, each done in triplicate.
Figure 3.Haloperidol (HAL) analog (HAL-F) lacks the property to accumulate in acidic compartments: (a) experimental procedure in hippocampal neurons; (b) representative images of living hippocampal neurons stained with LysoTracker Green (LTG) before (left panel) and after (right panel) HAL; (c) fluorescence intensity (FI). Left: relative FI in relation to before perfusion switch (set as 100%; mean±SEM); Right: light curves represent mean curves over all regions. Bold curves represent mean curves over all measurements per treatment (n=15 per group; ***p< 0.001, two-tailed, unpaired t-test versus dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) control).
Figure 4.Haloperidol (HAL), but not its non-accumulating analog HAL-F has antipsychotic effects in rodent models of psychosis: (a) treatment plan for induction of amphetamine (AMPH) hypersensitization–induced psychotic-like state and its treatment with osmotic mini pump intracerebroventricular application. Schizophrenia-like behavior was tested by AMPH-induced (intraperitoneally) hyperlocomotion (AIH) and pre-pulse inhibition (PPI); (b) time course of horizontal locomotion; (c) area under the curve (AUC) for locomotor activity during 30 min after the treatment; (d) time course of rearing; (e) AUC for rearing activity during 30 min after the treatment (mean±SEM; n=7–15 per group; *p<0.05, #p<0.01, $p<0.001 versus AMPH-VEH; §p<0.05 versus saline-VEH; VEH – vehicle).
Figure 5.Haloperidol (HAL), but not its non-accumulating analog HAL-F, has antipsychotic effects in rodent models of psychosis: (a) amphetamine (AMPH)-hypersensitized animals show reduced pre-pulse inhibition (PPI) of an acoustic startle reflex. HAL enhances PPI in these animals, suggesting antipsychotic efficacy. Less PPI enhancement was observed after subchronic treatment with HAL-F as shown by percentage inhibition for each pre-pulse–pulse pair; (b) overall percentage PPI (background noise = 68 dB; p100–120: pulse intensities 100–120 dB; mean±SEM; n=7–15 per group; *p<0.05, #p<0.01 versus AMPH/VEH; VEH – vehicle); (c) HAL-F reached the brain parenchyma in a dose dependent way (**p<0.01); (d) Fluorescent labelled HAL-F (red) accumulating in the dorsal striatum after chronic treatment.