A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Divergent pharmacological activity of novel marine-derived excitatory amino acids on glutamate receptors




AuthorsSanders JM, Ito K, Settimo L, Pentikainen OT, Shoji M, Sasaki M, Johnson MS, Sakai R, Swanson GT

PublisherAMER SOC PHARMACOLOGY EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS

Publication year2005

JournalJournal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics

Journal name in sourceJOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY AND EXPERIMENTAL THERAPEUTICS

Journal acronymJ PHARMACOL EXP THER

Volume314

Issue3

First page 1068

Last page1078

Number of pages11

ISSN0022-3565

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1124/jpet.105.086389


Abstract
Kainate receptors show a particular affinity for a variety of natural source compounds, including dysiherbaine (DH), a potent agonist derived from the marine sponge Dysidea herbacea. In this study, we characterized the pharmacological activity and structural basis for subunit selectivity of neodysiherbaine (neoDH) and MSVIII-19, which are natural and synthetic analogs of DH, respectively. NeoDH and MSVIII-19 differ from DH in the composition of two functional groups that confer specificity and selectivity for ionotropic glutamate receptors. In radioligand binding assays, neoDH displayed a 15- to 25-fold lower affinity relative to that of DH for glutamate receptor (GluR)5 and GluR6 kainate receptor subunits but a 7-fold higher affinity for kainate (KA)2 subunits, whereas MSVIII-19 displaced [H-3] kainate only from GluR5 subunits but not GluR6 or KA2 subunits. NeoDH was an agonist for kainate and alpha-amino-3hydroxy-5-methyl-4-isoxazolepropionic acid (AMPA) receptors in patch-clamp recordings; in contrast, MSVIII-19 acted as a potent antagonist for homomeric GluR5 receptor currents with weaker activity on other kainate and AMPA receptors. Neither neoDH nor MSVIII-19 activated group I metabotropic GluRs. Homology modeling suggests that two critical amino acids confer the high degree of selectivity between the dysiherbaine analogs and the GluR5 and KA2 subunits. In summary, these data describe the pharmacological activity of two new compounds, one of which is a selective GluR5 receptor antagonist that will be of use for understanding native receptor function and designing more selective ligands for kainate receptors.



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