| Literature DB >> 33555255 |
Rajendra Uprety1, Tao Che2,3,4, Saheem A Zaidi5, Steven G Grinnell6, Balázs R Varga3,4, Abdelfattah Faouzi3,4, Samuel T Slocum2, Abdullah Allaoa1, András Varadi1, Melissa Nelson6, Sarah M Bernhard3, Elizaveta Kulko6, Valerie Le Rouzic1, Shainnel O Eans7, Chloe A Simons7, Amanda Hunkele1, Joan Subrath1, Ying Xian Pan1,8, Jonathan A Javitch6, Jay P McLaughlin7, Bryan L Roth2, Gavril W Pasternak1, Vsevolod Katritch5, Susruta Majumdar1,3,4.
Abstract
Controlling receptor functional selectivity profiles for opioid receptors is a promising approach for discovering safer analgesics; however, the structural determinants conferring functional selectivity are not well understood. Here, we used crystal structures of opioid receptors, including the recently solved active state kappa opioid complex with MP1104, to rationally design novel mixed mu (MOR) and kappa (KOR) opioid receptor agonists with reduced arrestin signaling. Analysis of structure-activity relationships for new MP1104 analogs points to a region between transmembrane 5 (TM5) and extracellular loop (ECL2) as key for modulation of arrestin recruitment to both MOR and KOR. The lead compounds, MP1207 and MP1208, displayed MOR/KOR Gi-partial agonism with diminished arrestin signaling, showed efficient analgesia with attenuated liabilities, including respiratory depression and conditioned place preference and aversion in mice. The findings validate a novel structure-inspired paradigm for achieving beneficial in vivo profiles for analgesia through different mechanisms that include bias, partial agonism, and dual MOR/KOR agonism.Entities:
Keywords: GPCR bias; biochemistry; boat/chair; chemical biology; functional selectivity; mouse; safer opioids; structure-based drug design
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33555255 PMCID: PMC7909954 DOI: 10.7554/eLife.56519
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Elife ISSN: 2050-084X Impact factor: 8.140