| Literature DB >> 34011153 |
Alessandro Bonifazi1, Francisco O Battiti1, Julie Sanchez2,3, Saheem A Zaidi4, Eric Bow5, Mariia Makarova5, Jianjing Cao1, Anver Basha Shaik1, Agnieszka Sulima5, Kenner C Rice5, Vsevolod Katritch4, Meritxell Canals2,3, J Robert Lane2,3, Amy Hauck Newman1.
Abstract
The need for safer pain-management therapies with decreased abuse liability inspired a novel drug design that retains μ-opioid receptor (MOR)-mediated analgesia, while minimizing addictive liability. We recently demonstrated that targeting the dopamine D3 receptor (D3R) with highly selective antagonists/partial agonists can reduce opioid self-administration and reinstatement to drug seeking in rodent models without diminishing antinociceptive effects. The identification of the D3R as a target for the treatment of opioid use disorders prompted the idea of generating a class of ligands presenting bitopic or bivalent structures, allowing the dual-target binding of the MOR and D3R. Structure-activity relationship studies using computationally aided drug design and in vitro binding assays led to the identification of potent dual-target leads (23, 28, and 40), based on different structural templates and scaffolds, with moderate (sub-micromolar) to high (low nanomolar/sub-nanomolar) binding affinities. Bioluminescence resonance energy transfer-based functional studies revealed MOR agonist-D3R antagonist/partial agonist efficacies that suggest potential for maintaining analgesia with reduced opioid-abuse liability.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 34011153 PMCID: PMC9308496 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.1c00611
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 8.039