| Literature DB >> 35710132 |
Deborah J Luessen, P Jeffrey Conn.
Abstract
Metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) receptors, a family of G-protein-coupled receptors, have been identified as novel therapeutic targets based on extensive research supporting their diverse contributions to cell signaling and physiology throughout the nervous system and important roles in regulating complex behaviors, such as cognition, reward, and movement. Thus, targeting mGlu receptors may be a promising strategy for the treatment of several brain disorders. Ongoing advances in the discovery of subtype-selective allosteric modulators for mGlu receptors has provided an unprecedented opportunity for highly specific modulation of signaling by individual mGlu receptor subtypes in the brain by targeting sites distinct from orthosteric or endogenous ligand binding sites on mGlu receptors. These pharmacological agents provide the unparalleled opportunity to selectively regulate neuronal excitability, synaptic transmission, and subsequent behavioral output pertinent to many brain disorders. Here, we review preclinical and clinical evidence supporting the utility of mGlu receptor allosteric modulators as novel therapeutic approaches to treat neuropsychiatric diseases, such as schizophrenia, substance use disorders, and stress-related disorders. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: Allosteric modulation of metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) receptors represents a promising therapeutic strategy to normalize dysregulated cellular physiology associated with neuropsychiatric disease. This review summarizes preclinical and clinical studies using mGlu receptor allosteric modulators as experimental tools and potential therapeutic approaches for the treatment of neuropsychiatric diseases, including schizophrenia, stress, and substance use disorders.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35710132 PMCID: PMC9553119 DOI: 10.1124/pharmrev.121.000540
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacol Rev ISSN: 0031-6997 Impact factor: 18.923
Summary of mGlu receptor subtype expression, signaling, and interacting partners
| Group | Receptor | CNS Expression | Synaptic Localization | G protein Coupling | Primary Signaling Pathways | Interacting Partners |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Group I | mGlu1 | Widespread in neurons | Predominantly postsynaptic | Primarily G | PLC | Activates NMDA receptors activates Ca2+ channels (e.g., Cav2.1) activates CaMKII |
| mGlu5 | Widespread in neurons | |||||
| Group II | mGlu2 | Widespread in neurons | Presynaptic and postsynaptic | Primarily G | Inhibition of adenylyl cyclase MAPK/ERK IP3-PI3 kinase | Activation of K+ channels inhibition of voltage-gated Ca2+ channels (e.g., N- type) |
| mGlu3 | Widespread in neurons, astrocytes | |||||
| Group III | mGlu4 | Widespread in neurons, high in cerebellum | Predominantly presynaptic | Primarily G | Inhibition of adenylyl cylcase MAPK/ERK IP3 (mGlu7) stimulation of cGMP phosphodiesterase (mGlu6) | Activation of K+ channels inhibition of Ca2+ channels (P/Q subtype) |
| mGlu6 | Retina, select neuron populations, microglia | Postsynaptic in retinal cells | ||||
| mGlu7 | Widespread in neurons | Active zone of presynaptic terminals | ||||
| mGlu8 | Lower and more restricted expression than mGlu4/7 | Predominantly presynaptic |
caMKII-alpha, Calcium/calmodulin-dependent kinase II; cGMP, cyclic guanosine monophosphate; DAG, diacyl-glycerol; G protein i/o alpha subunit; G protein Gs alpha subunit; G protein Gq alpha subunit; IP3, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate; MAPK/ERK, mitogen-activated protein kinase/extracellular receptor kinase; mTOR, mammalian target of rapamycin; PI3 kinase, phosphatidyl inositol 3-kinase; PLCβ, phospholipase Cβ; p70-S6 kinase, P70-S6; P/Q, P/Q-type calcium channel.
Summary of preclinical efficacy of group I mGlu receptor allosteric modulators in schizophrenia-related deficits
| Receptor | Type | Compound | Positive Symptom Models | Negative Symptoms Models | Cognitive Models | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mGlu1 | PAM | VU0483605 | No effect on AHL |
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| VU6004909 | Attenuates AMPH-induced hyperlocomotion and disruptions in PPI | No effect on PR |
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| NAM | FTIDC | Attenuates MHL and PPI deficits |
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| CFMTI | Reduced MHL and NMDAR antagonist-induced hyperlocomotion (NMDAR-HL) Ameliorated METH and ketamine-disrupted PPI | Reversal of MK-801-disrupted social interaction | No effect on object location memory | Satow et al., 2008 | ||
| mGlu5 | PAM | CDPPB | Attenuated AMPH-induced hyperlocomotion and deficits in PPI | Attenuated MK-801-induced decrease in sucrose preference | ↑Morris water maze learning | (See footnotes.) |
| 5PAM523 | Reduced AHL | ↑Contextual CF2 | (See footnotes.) | |||
| VU0409551 | Reverses MK-801-induced hyperlocomotion | ↑Working memory/executive function in the DNMTP task |
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AHL, amphetamine-induced hyperlocomotion; AMPH, amphetamine; CF, fear conditioning; DNMTP, delayed nonmatching to position; HL, hyperlocomotion; METH, methamphetamine; MHL, METH-induced hyperlocomotion; NOR, novel object recognition; SR, serine racemase-deficient.
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Summary of preclinical efficacy of group III mGlu receptor allosteric modulators in schizophrenia-related deficits
| Receptor | Type | Compound | Positive Symptom Models | Negative Symptoms Models | Cognitive Models | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mGlu4 | PAM | ADX88178 | Reduced NMDAR-HL; reduced DOI-induced head twitches | Reduced immobility in FST |
| |
| Lu AF21934 | Reduced NMDAR-HL and AHL; | Reduced MK-801-induced deficits in social interaction | Rescued MK-801-induced deficits in the delayed spatial alternation task; | (See footnotes.) | ||
| Lu AF32615 | Reduced NMDAR-HL and AHL; reduced DOI-induced head twitches | Reversed MK-801-induced deficits in social interaction | Reversed MK-801-induced deficits in the delayed spatial alternation task | Sławińska et al., 2013 | ||
| mGlu7 | Ago-PAM | AMN082 | No effect on AHL; exacerbated NMDAR-HL; | (See footnotes.) | ||
| NAM | MMPIP ADX71743 | Inhibited MK-801-induced hyperactivity and reversed deficits in PPI | Reversed MK-801-induced deficits in NOR and spatial delayed alternation |
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AHL, amphetamine-induced hyperlocomotion; HL, hyperlocomotion; NOR, novel object recognition.
Sławińska et al., 2013.
Mitsukawa et al., 2005.
Wierońska et al., 2012a.
Summary of preclinical efficacy of group II mGlu receptor allosteric modulators in schizophrenia-related deficits
| Receptor | Type | Compound | Positive Symptom Models | Negative Symptoms Models | Cognitive Models | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mGlu2 | PAM | LY487379 | Reduced NMDAR-HL and AHL; | Reduced PCP-induced deficits in social interaction | Promoted cognitive flexibility in ASST | (See footnotes.) |
| BINA | Reduced NMDAR-HL; | Reduced MK-801-induced increased immobility in the FST | (See footnotes.) | |||
| TASP0443294 | Reduced MHL | Rescued MK-801-induced social memory deficits | (See footnotes.) | |||
| JNJ-40411813/ADX71149 | Reduced NMDAR-HL; no effect on AHL; inhibited DOM-induced head twitches |
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| SAR 218645 | No effect on NMDAR-HL or AHL; no effect on hyperactivity in DAT−/− and NR1neo −/− mice; reduced DOI-induced head twitches | Reversed MK-801-induced deficits in NOR; attenuated working memory deficits in Y-maze test in NR1neo−/− mice |
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| mGlu3 | NAM | VU0477950 | Dose-dependent impairment in extinction learning |
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| VU0650786 | Blocked the ability of mGlu2/3 agonists to restore trace fear conditioning after PCP administration |
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AHL, amphetamine-induced hyperlocomotion; AMPH, amphetamine; ASST, attentional set-shift task; DAT, dopamine transporter; DOB, dimethoxy-bromoamphetamine; HL, hyperlocomotion; METH, methamphetamine; MHL, METH-induced hyperlocomotion; NOR, novel object recognition; NR1neo, NR1 subunit reduced expression.
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Lavreysen et al., 2015.
Summary of preclinical efficacy of group I mGlu receptor allosteric modulators in substance use disorder models
| Receptor | Type | Compound | Drug of Abuse | Behavioral Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| mGlu1 | PAM | SYN119/Ro0711401 | Cocaine | Blocks incubation of cue-induced cocaine craving after extended-access self-administration |
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| Methamphetamine | No effect on incubation of methamphetamine craving after extended-access self-administration and withdrawal |
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| NAM | JNJ-16259685 | Alcohol | Decreased responding under FR/PR schedules | ||
| Cocaine and methamphetamine | Decreased self-administration under a second-order reinforcement schedule of reinforcement (FI5-FR10) |
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| CPCCOEt | Alcohol | Decreased self-administration under FR and PR schedules of reinforcement in alcohol-preferring P-rats or C57BL/6J mice; | 1 | ||
| EMQMCM | Nicotine | Inhibited cue and nicotine-induced reinstatement of nicotine-seeking behavior |
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| Morphine and cocaine | Inhibited the expression of locomotor sensitization | ||||
| YM298198 | Cocaine | Decreased cocaine-primed reinstatement of cocaine seeking |
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| mGlu5 | NAM | MPEP/MTEP | Cocaine, nicotine, heroin, and alcohol | Attenuates self-administration (intravenous or oral) | |
| Cocaine | Attenuated cue-induced reinstatement of cocaine seeking | ||||
| Alcohol, cocaine, and nicotine | Reduced breakpoints under PR reinforcement schedule | ||||
| Methamphetamine | Reduced incubated methamphetamine seeking; decreased self-administration under FR and PR schedules of reinforcement | ||||
| Partial NAM | M-5MPEP/Br-5MPEPy | Cocaine | Decreased self-administration and attenuated the discriminative stimulus effects of cocaine |
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CPP, conditioned place preference; FI, fixed interval ;FR, fixed ratio; P, preferring; SYN119, mGlu1 PAM.
Casabona et al., 1997.
Hodge et al., 2006.
Schroeder et al., 2005.
Lominac et al., 2006.
Summary of preclinical efficacy of group II/III mGlu receptor allosteric modulators in substance use disorder models
| Group | Receptor | Type | Compound | Drug of Abuse | Behavioral Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| II | mGlu2 | PAM | BINA | Cocaine | Decreased cocaine self-administration in both short-access (1 h) and long-access (6 h) in rats; decreased cue-induced reinstatement of cocaine seeking without altering food seeking |
|
| AZD8418/AZD8529 | Nicotine | Deceased nicotine self-administration and blocked cue-induced reinstatement of nicotine- and food-seeking behavior |
| |||
| III | mGlu7 | Ago-PAM | AMN082 | Cocaine | Reduced self-administration under an FR2 schedule of reinforcement; lowered PR breakpoints in rats | |
| Cocaine | Attenuates cocaine-primed reinstatement of cocaine-seeking behavior |
| ||||
| Alcohol and heroin | Inhibited self-administration and preference |
FR, fixed ratio; PR, progressive ratio
Summary of preclinical efficacy of group I/II mGlu receptor allosteric modulators in stress-related deficits
| Group | Receptor | Type | Compound | Behavioral Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| I | mGlu5 | PAM | CDPPB | Facilitated the extinction of contextual fear memory; enhanced the initial fear memory formation and had no effect on memory retrieval |
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| NAM | MPEP/MTEP | Antidepressant-like activity in the tail TST and FST | (See footnotes.) | ||
| DSR-98776 | Produces antidepressant-like actions in rats |
| |||
| Partial NAM | M-5MPEP/Br-5MPEPy | Demonstrate antidepressant- and anxiolytic-like activity in FST, TST, SIH and marble burying tests |
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| VU0477573 | Dose-dependent efficacy in marble-burying test |
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| II | mGlu2 | PAM | BINA | Anxiolytic-like effects on SIH and EPM tests in mice |
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| THIIC | Anxiolytic-like efficacy in SIH assay in rats and stress-induced marble-burying assay in mice |
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| LY487379/LY379268 | Anxiolytic-like efficacy in SIH assay in mice |
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| mGlu2 | NAM | VU6001966 | Reverse passive coping behavior in the FST |
| |
| mGlu3 | NAM | VU0650786 | Antidepressant-like and anxiolytic-like effects as measured by FST and marble-burying tests |
| |
| Reverse passive coping behavior in the FST; reduce stress-induced deficits in motivation |
| ||||
| Blocked LY379268-induced trace fear conditioning enhancement in mice |
|
BR-5MPEPy, bromo-2-[2-(3 methoxyphenyl)ethynyl]-5-methylpyridine; M-5MPEP, 2-[2-(3 methoxyphenyl)ethynyl]-5-methylpyridine; THIIC, (trifluoromethyl)-3-hydroxy-4-(isobutyryl)phenoxy)methyl)benzyl)-1-methyl-1H-imidazole-4-carboxamide; TST, tail suspension test.
Li et al., 2006.
Belozertseva et al., 2007.
Summary of preclinical efficacy of group III mGlu receptor allosteric modulators in stress-related deficits
| Receptor | Type | Compound | Behavioral Effect | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| mGlu4 | PAM | PHCCC | Antidepressant-like effects in rats; | (See footnotes.) |
| ADX88178 | Reduced duration of immobility in the FST; attenuated conditioned freezing in the acquisition phase of the fear conditioning |
| ||
| Lu AF21934 | Anxiolytic, but not antidepressant-like, effects as measured by SIH, four-plate, marble-burying, and Vogel’s conflict tests |
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| mGlu7 | NAM | ADX71743 | Dose-dependent reduction in the number of buried marbles and increasing open arm exploration in EPM and marble-burying assays |
|
Kłak et al., 2007.
Stachowicz et al., 2004.
BLA, basolateral amygdala