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    Discovery of ML314, a Brain Penetrant Nonpeptidic β‑Arrestin Biased Agonist of the Neurotensin NTR1 Receptor

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    The neurotensin 1 receptor (NTR1) is an important therapeutic target for a range of disease states including addiction. A high-throughput screening campaign, followed by medicinal chemistry optimization, led to the discovery of a nonpeptidic β-arrestin biased agonist for NTR1. The lead compound, 2-cyclopropyl-6,7-dimethoxy-4-(4-(2-methoxyphenyl)-piperazin-1-yl)­quinazoline, <b>32</b> (ML314), exhibits full agonist behavior against NTR1 (EC<sub>50</sub> = 2.0 μM) in the primary assay and selectivity against NTR2. The effect of <b>32</b> is blocked by the NTR1 antagonist SR142948A in a dose-dependent manner. Unlike peptide-based NTR1 agonists, compound <b>32</b> has no significant response in a Ca<sup>2+</sup> mobilization assay and is thus a biased agonist that activates the β-arrestin pathway rather than the traditional G<sub><i>q</i></sub> coupled pathway. This bias has distinct biochemical and functional consequences that may lead to physiological advantages. Compound <b>32</b> displays good brain penetration in rodents, and studies examining its in vivo properties are underway
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