10 research outputs found
Targeting metabotropic glutamate receptors for novel treatments of schizophrenia
Abstract Support for the N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) hypofunction hypothesis of schizophrenia has led to increasing focus on restoring proper glutamatergic signaling as an approach for treatment of this devastating disease. The ability of metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) receptors to modulate glutamatergic neurotransmission has thus attracted considerable attention for the development of novel antipsychotics. Consisting of eight subtypes classified into three groups based on sequence homology, signal transduction, and pharmacology, the mGlu receptors provide a wide range of targets to modulate NMDAR function as well as glutamate release. Recently, allosteric modulators of mGlu receptors have been developed that allow unprecedented selectivity among subtypes, not just groups, facilitating the investigation of the effects of subtype-specific modulation. In preclinical animal models, positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) of the group I mGlu receptor mGlu5 have efficacy across all three symptom domains of schizophrenia (positive, negative, and cognitive). The discovery and development of mGlu5 PAMs that display unique signal bias suggests that efficacy can be retained while avoiding the neurotoxic effects of earlier compounds. Interestingly, mGlu1 negative allosteric modulators (NAMs) appear efficacious in positive symptom models of the disease but are still in early preclinical development. While selective group II mGlu receptor (mGlu2/3) agonists have reached clinical trials but were unsuccessful, specific mGlu2 or mGlu3 receptor targeting still hold great promise. Genetic studies implicated mGlu2 in the antipsychotic effects of group II agonists and mGlu2 PAMs have since entered into clinical trials. Additionally, mGlu3 appears to play an important role in cognition, may confer neuroprotective effects, and thus is a promising target to alleviate cognitive deficits in schizophrenia. Although group III mGlu receptors (mGlu4/6/7/8) have attracted less attention, mGlu4 agonists and PAMs appear to have efficacy across all three symptoms domains in preclinical models. The recent discovery of heterodimers comprising mGlu2 and mGlu4 may explain the efficacy of mGlu4 selective compounds but this remains to be determined. Taken together, compounds targeting mGlu receptors, specifically subtype-selective allosteric modulators, provide a compelling alternative approach to fill the unmet clinical needs for patients with schizophrenia
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Induction and Expression of Fear Sensitization Caused by Acute Traumatic Stress.
Fear promotes adaptive responses to threats. However, when the level of fear is not proportional to the level of threat, maladaptive fear-related behaviors characteristic of anxiety disorders result. Post-traumatic stress disorder develops in response to a traumatic event, and patients often show sensitized reactions to mild stressors associated with the trauma. Stress-enhanced fear learning (SEFL) is a rodent model of this sensitized responding, in which exposure to a 15-shock stressor nonassociatively enhances subsequent fear conditioning training with only a single trial. We examined the role of corticosterone (CORT) in SEFL. Administration of the CORT synthesis blocker metyrapone prior to the stressor, but not at time points after, attenuated SEFL. Moreover, CORT co-administered with metyrapone rescued SEFL. However, CORT alone without the stressor was not sufficient to produce SEFL. In these same animals, we then looked for correlates of SEFL in terms of changes in excitatory receptor expression. Western blot analysis of the basolateral amygdala (BLA) revealed an increase in the GluA1 AMPA receptor subunit that correlated with SEFL. Thus, CORT is permissive to trauma-induced changes in BLA function
PF-06827443 Displays Robust Allosteric Agonist and Positive Allosteric Modulator Activity in High Receptor Reserve and Native Systems
Positive
allosteric modulators (PAMs) of the M<sub>1</sub> subtype
of muscarinic acetylcholine receptor have attracted intense interest
as an exciting new approach for improving the cognitive deficits in
schizophrenia and Alzheimer’s disease. Recent evidence suggests
that the presence of intrinsic agonist activity of some M<sub>1</sub> PAMs may reduce efficacy and contribute to adverse effect liability.
However, the M<sub>1</sub> PAM PF-06827443 was reported to have only
weak agonist activity at human M<sub>1</sub> receptors but produced
M<sub>1</sub>-dependent adverse effects. We now report that PF-06827443
is an allosteric agonist in cell lines expressing rat, dog, and human
M<sub>1</sub> and use of inducible cell lines shows that agonist activity
of PF-06827443 is dependent on receptor reserve. Furthermore, PF-06827443
is an agonist in native tissue preparations and induces behavioral
convulsions in mice similar to other ago-PAMs. These findings suggest
that PF-06827443 is a robust ago-PAM, independent of species, in cell
lines and native systems
A Novel M<sub>1</sub> PAM VU0486846 Exerts Efficacy in Cognition Models without Displaying Agonist Activity or Cholinergic Toxicity
Selective
activation of the M<sub>1</sub> subtype of muscarinic
acetylcholine receptor, via positive allosteric modulation (PAM),
is an exciting strategy to improve cognition in schizophrenia and
Alzheimer’s disease patients. However, highly potent M<sub>1</sub> ago-PAMs, such as MK-7622, PF-06764427, and PF-06827443,
can engender excessive activation of M<sub>1</sub>, leading to agonist
actions in the prefrontal cortex (PFC) that impair cognitive function,
induce behavioral convulsions, and result in other classic cholinergic
adverse events (AEs). Here, we report a fundamentally new and highly
selective M<sub>1</sub> PAM, VU0486846. VU0486846 possesses only weak
agonist activity in M<sub>1</sub>-expressing cell lines with high
receptor reserve and is devoid of agonist actions in the PFC, unlike
previously reported ago-PAMs MK-7622, PF-06764427, and PF-06827443.
Moreover, VU0486846 shows no interaction with antagonist binding at
the orthosteric acetylcholine (ACh) site (e.g., neither bitopic nor
displaying negative cooperativity with [<sup>3</sup>H]-NMS binding
at the orthosteric site), no seizure liability at high brain exposures,
and no cholinergic AEs. However, as opposed to ago-PAMs, VU0486846
produces robust efficacy in the novel object recognition model of
cognitive function. Importantly, we show for the first time that an
M<sub>1</sub> PAM can reverse the cognitive deficits induced by atypical
antipsychotics, such as risperidone. These findings further strengthen
the argument that compounds with modest in vitro M<sub>1</sub> PAM
activity (EC<sub>50</sub> > 100 nM) and pure-PAM activity in native
tissues display robust procognitive efficacy without AEs mediated
by excessive activation of M<sub>1</sub>. Overall, the combination
of compound assessment with recombinant in vitro assays (mindful of
receptor reserve), native tissue systems (PFC), and phenotypic screens
(behavioral convulsions) is essential to fully understand and evaluate
lead compounds and enhance success in clinical development
A single early-life seizure results in long-term behavioral changes in the adult Fmr1 knockout mouse
Induction and Expression of Fear Sensitization Caused by Acute Traumatic Stress
Fear promotes adaptive responses to threats. However, when the level of fear is not proportional to the level of threat, maladaptive fear-related behaviors characteristic of anxiety disorders result. Post-traumatic stress disorder develops in response to a traumatic event, and patients often show sensitized reactions to mild stressors associated with the trauma. Stress-enhanced fear learning (SEFL) is a rodent model of this sensitized responding, in which exposure to a 15-shock stressor nonassociatively enhances subsequent fear conditioning training with only a single trial. We examined the role of corticosterone (CORT) in SEFL. Administration of the CORT synthesis blocker metyrapone prior to the stressor, but not at time points after, attenuated SEFL. Moreover, CORT co-administered with metyrapone rescued SEFL. However, CORT alone without the stressor was not sufficient to produce SEFL. In these same animals, we then looked for correlates of SEFL in terms of changes in excitatory receptor expression. Western blot analysis of the basolateral amygdala (BLA) revealed an increase in the GluA1 AMPA receptor subunit that correlated with SEFL. Thus, CORT is permissive to trauma-induced changes in BLA function