9 research outputs found

    In Vitro Pharmacological Characterization of RXFP3 Allosterism: An Example of Probe Dependency

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    Recent findings suggest that the relaxin-3 neural network may represent a new ascending arousal pathway able to modulate a range of neural circuits including those affecting circadian rhythm and sleep/wake states, spatial and emotional memory, motivation and reward, the response to stress, and feeding and metabolism. Therefore, the relaxin-3 receptor (RXFP3) is a potential therapeutic target for the treatment of various CNS diseases. Here we describe a novel selective RXFP3 receptor positive allosteric modulator (PAM), 3-[3,5-Bis(trifluoromethyl)phenyl]-1-(3,4-dichlorobenzyl)-1-[2-(5-methoxy-1H-indol-3-yl)ethyl]urea (135PAM1). Calcium mobilization and cAMP accumulation assays in cell lines expressing the cloned human RXFP3 receptor show the compound does not directly activate RXFP3 receptor but increases functional responses to amidated relaxin-3 or R3/I5, a chimera of the INSL5 A chain and the Relaxin-3 B chain. 135PAM1 increases calcium mobilization in the presence of relaxin-3NH2 and R3/I5NH2 with pEC50 values of 6.54 (6.46 to 6.64) and 6.07 (5.94 to 6.20), respectively. In the cAMP accumulation assay, 135PAM1 inhibits the CRE response to forskolin with a pIC50 of 6.12 (5.98 to 6.27) in the presence of a probe (10 nM) concentration of relaxin-3NH2. 135PAM1 does not compete for binding with the orthosteric radioligand, [125I] R3I5 (amide), in membranes prepared from cells expressing the cloned human RXFP3 receptor. 135PAM1 is selective for RXFP3 over RXFP4, which also responds to relaxin-3. However, when using the free acid (native) form of relaxin-3 or R3/I5, 135PAM1 doesn't activate RXFP3 indicating that the compound's effect is probe dependent. Thus one can exchange the entire A-chain of the probe peptide while retaining PAM activity, but the state of the probe's c-terminus is crucial to allosteric activity of the PAM. These data demonstrate the existence of an allosteric site for modulation of this GPCR as well as the subtlety of changes in probe molecules that can affect allosteric modulation of RXFP3

    135PAM1 shifts the concentration response curves of Relaxin-3<sub>NH2</sub> and R3/I5<sub>NH2</sub>.

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    <p>HEK-293 cells coexpressing RXFP3 and G<sub>qI5</sub> were incubated with fixed concentrations of 135PAM1 (0, 0.2, 2 and 20 µM) 10 min before the addition of increasing concentrations of Relaxin-3<sub>NH2</sub> (A), R3I5<sub>NH2</sub> (B), Relaxin-3<sub>OH</sub> (C) or R3I5<sub>OH</sub> (D).</p

    135PAM1 lacks affinity at the orthosteric binding site of RXFP3 receptor.

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    <p>135PAM1 did not displace [125I] R3/I5<sub>NH2</sub> at concentrations of up to 20 µM, but instead increased total binding. R3/I5<sub>NH2</sub> displaced the tracer with a pIC<sub>50</sub> of 8.76 (8.91 to 8.61).</p

    135PAM1 increases the intracellular Ca<sup>2+</sup> response to amidated, but not free acid RXFP3 agonists in cells coexpressing RXFP3 and G<sub>qI5</sub>.

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    <p>Intracellular Ca<sup>2+</sup> responses by HEK-293 cells coexpressing RXFP3 and G<sub>qI5</sub> were measured in response to escalating concentrations of 135PAM1 using probe (EC<sub>20</sub>) concentrations of Relaxin-3<sub>NH2</sub> (A), Relaxin-3<sub>OH</sub> (B), R3/I5<sub>NH2</sub> (C), or R3/I5<sub>OH</sub> (D).</p

    Shifting of amidated RXFP3 agonist concentration response curves by 135PAM1 in cells lacking chimeric G proteins.

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    <p>SK-N-MC cells coexpressing RXFP3 and a reporter construct linking CRE activity to β-galactosidase were incubated with fixed concentrations of 135PAM1 (0, 0.2, 2 and 20 µM) and increasing concentrations of Relaxin-3<sub>NH2</sub> (A) or R3I5<sub>NH2</sub> (B).</p

    Regulation of brain anandamide by acute administration of ethanol

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    The endogenous cannabinoid acylethanolamide AEA (arachidonoylethanolamide; also known as anandamide) participates in the neuroadaptations associated with chronic ethanol exposure. However, no studies have described the acute actions of ethanol on AEA production and degradation. In the present study, we investigated the time course of the effects of the intraperitoneal administration of ethanol (4 g/kg of body mass) on the endogenous levels of AEA in central and peripheral tissues. Acute ethanol administration decreased AEA in the cerebellum, the hippocampus and the nucleus accumbens of the ventral striatum, as well as in plasma and adipose tissue. Parallel decreases of a second acylethanolamide, PEA (palmitoylethanolamide), were observed in the brain. Effects were observed 45–90 min after ethanol administration. In vivo studies revealed that AEA decreases were associated with a remarkable inhibition of the release of both anandamide and glutamate in the nucleus accumbens. There were no changes in the expression and enzymatic activity of the main enzyme that degrades AEA, the fatty acid amidohydrolase. Acute ethanol administration did not change either the activity of N-acyltransferase, the enzyme that catalyses the synthesis of the AEA precursor, or the expression of NAPE-PLD (N-acylphosphatidylethanolamine-hydrolysing phospholipase D), the enzyme that releases AEA from membrane phospholipid precursors. These results suggest that receptor-mediated release of acylethanolamide is inhibited by the acute administration of ethanol, and that this effect is not derived from increased fatty acid ethanolamide degradation
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