1 research outputs found
Hybridization into a Bitopic Ligand Increased Muscarinic Receptor Activation for Isopilocarpine but Not for Pilocarpine Derivatives
Pilocarpine (1), a secondary metabolite
of several Pilocarpus species, is a therapeutically
used partial agonist
of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors (mAChRs). The available pharmacological
data and structure–activity relationships do not provide comparable
data for all five receptor subtypes. In this study, pilocarpine (1), its epimer isopilocarpine (2), racemic analogues
pilosinine (3) and desmethyl pilosinine (4), and the respective hybrid ligands with a naphmethonium fragment
(5-C6 to 8-C6) were synthesized and analyzed
in mini-G nano-BRET assays at the five mAChRs. In line with earlier
studies, pilocarpine was the most active compound among the orthosteric
ligands 1–4. Computational docking
of pilocarpine and isopilocarpine to the active M2 receptor
suggests that the trans-configuration of isopilocarpine
leads to a loss of the hydrogen bond from the lactone carbonyl to
N6.52, explaining the lower activity of isopilocarpine.
Hybrid formation of pilocarpine (1) and isopilocarpine
(2) led to an inverted activity rank, with the trans-configured isopilocarpine hybrid (6-C6) being more active. The hydrogen bond of interest is formed by the
isopilocarpine hybrid (6-C6) but not by the pilocarpine
hybrid (5-C6). Hybridization thus leads to a modified
binding mode of the orthosteric moiety, as the binding mode of the
hybrid is dominated by the high-affinity allosteric moiety