| Literature DB >> 34790192 |
Berna Kaya1, Hassan Melhem1, Jan Hendrik Niess1,2.
Abstract
Diet and gut microbial metabolites mediate host immune responses and are central to the maintenance of intestinal health. The metabolite-sensing G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) bind metabolites and trigger signals that are important for the host cell function, survival, proliferation and expansion. On the contrary, inadequate signaling of these metabolite-sensing GPCRs most likely participate to the development of diseases including inflammatory bowel diseases (IBD). In the intestine, metabolite-sensing GPCRs are highly expressed by epithelial cells and by specific subsets of immune cells. Such receptors provide an important link between immune system, gut microbiota and metabolic system. Member of these receptors, GPR35, a class A rhodopsin-like GPCR, has been shown to be activated by the metabolites tryptophan-derived kynurenic acid (KYNA), the chemokine CXCL17 and phospholipid derivate lysophosphatidic acid (LPA) species. There have been studies on GPR35 in the context of intestinal diseases since its identification as a risk gene for IBD. In this review, we discuss the pharmacology of GPR35 including its proposed endogenous and synthetic ligands as well as its antagonists. We elaborate on the risk variants of GPR35 implicated in gut-related diseases and the mechanisms by which GPR35 contribute to intestinal homeostasis.Entities:
Keywords: GPR35; inflammatory bowel diseases; ligand-receptor interactions; metabolites; microbiota; risk variants
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34790192 PMCID: PMC8591220 DOI: 10.3389/fimmu.2021.717392
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Immunol ISSN: 1664-3224 Impact factor: 7.561
Proposed agonists and antagonists of GPR35.
| Potential Endogenous Ligands | Source in the intestine | EC50 (human) | EC50 (mouse) | EC50 (rat) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kynurenic acid | Host, Microbiota | 217 μM | Not available | 66 μM | ( |
| LPA | Host, Microbiota | Not available | Not available | Not available | ( |
| CXCL17 | Host | Not available | Not available | Not available | ( |
| DHICA | Host | 22 μM | Not available | Not available | ( |
| Reverse T3 | Host, Microbiota | 100 μM | Not available | Not available | ( |
| cGMP | Host | 131 μM | Not available | Not available | ( |
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| Zaprinast | 2-8 μM | 1 μM | 100 nM | ( | |
| Lodoxamide | 4 nM | Not available | 13 nM | ( | |
| Pamoic acid | 30-50 nM | No response | >100 μM | ( | |
| Amlexanox | Not available | Not assessed | Not available | ( | |
| Bufrolin | 13 nM | Not available | 10 nM | ( | |
| Compound 1 | 26 nM | 17 μM | 8 μM | ( | |
| Cromolyn disodium | Not available | Not available | Not available | ( | |
| 6-bromo-8-(4-methoxybenzamido)-4-oxo-4H-chromene-2-carboxylic acid | Not available | Not assessed | Not available | ( | |
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| ML-145 | ~25 nM | No response | No response | ( | |
| CID2745687 | ~200 nM | No response | No response | ( | |
| ML-194 | ~200 nM | Not assessed | Not assessed | ( |
Risk variants of GPR35 associated with diseases.
| Variant ID | Variant type | Position (ch2): | Substitution | MAF | Linked Diseases | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rs4676410 | Intron | 240624322 | G>A | 0.272 | Ankylosing spondylitis, IBD, PSC, systemic lupus erythematosus | ( |
| rs3749171 | Missense | 240630275 | C>T (T108M) | 0.151 | CD, UC | ( |
| rs3749172 | Missense | 240630832 | C>A (S294R) | 0.484 | CD, coronary artery calcification | ( |
| rs4676408 | Intergenic | 240634984 | A>G | 0.4 | UC, CD | ( |
| rs4676406 | Intergenic | 240639691 | T>G | 0.374 | Ankylosing spondylitis, psoriasis, PSC | ( |
| rs34236350 | 5’ UTR | 240628909 | C>T | 0.261 | Ankylosing spondylitis, psoriasis | ( |
MAF, Minor Allele Frequency; UTR, Untranslated region.
Haplotype frequencies of IBD-associated GPR35 variants across all populations analyzed by LDHap (ldlink.nci.nih.gov/?tab=ldhap).
| RS Number | Position (GRCh37) | Allele Frequencies | Haplotypes | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| rs4676410 | chr2:241563739 | G=0.728, A=0.272 | G | A | A |
| rs3749171 | chr2:241569692 | C=0.849, T=0.151 | C | T | C |
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Figure 1Physiological functions of GPR35 in the intestine 1) Macrophage expressed GPR35 induces TNF accompanied by transcription of Cyp11b1 encoding for steroidogenic enzyme 11β –hydroxylase in epithelial cells during colitis. In a second mechanism, epithelial GPR35 promotes mucosal repair through ERK and fibronectin-mediated proliferation. 2) Disruption of GPR35 signaling in epithelial cells leads to pyroptosis in goblet cells resulting in reduced mucus production and therefore an impaired mucosal barrier integrity which leads to increased susceptibility to C. rodentium infection. GPR35 serves as a sensor in Bacteroidetes fragilis toxin (BFT)-induced colitis. 3) GPR35 interaction with Na/K-ATPase pump induces Src activation in both epithelial cells and tumor-associated macrophages (TAMs) in colorectal cancer model via increased proliferation in epithelial cells and neovascularization in response to TAM-derived VEGF. Created with BioRender.com.