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  3. Mechanistic Insights into the Adenosine A1 Receptor's Positive Allosteric Modulation for Non-Opioid Analgesics.
 

Mechanistic Insights into the Adenosine A1 Receptor's Positive Allosteric Modulation for Non-Opioid Analgesics.

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BORIS DOI
10.48620/84573
Date of Publication
December 21, 2024
Publication Type
Article
Division/Institute

Institut für Biochemi...

Institute of Biochemi...

Author
Weizmann, Tal
Pearce, Abigail
Griffin, Peter
Schild, Achille
Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine (IBMM)
Flaßhoff, Maren
Institut für Biochemie und Molekulare Medizin, Gruppe Lochner
Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine (IBMM)
Grossenbacher, Philipp
Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine (IBMM)
Lochner, Martinorcid-logo
Institut für Biochemie und Molekulare Medizin, Gruppe Lochner
Institute of Biochemistry and Molecular Medicine (IBMM)
Reynolds, Christopher A
Ladds, Graham
Deganutti, Giuseppe
Subject(s)

600 - Technology::610...

Series
Cells
ISSN or ISBN (if monograph)
2073-4409
Publisher
MDPI
Language
English
Publisher DOI
10.3390/cells13242121
PubMed ID
39768211
Uncontrolled Keywords

BnOCPA

GPCRs

MIPS521

adenosine A1 receptor...

non-opioid analgesia

Description
The adenosine A1 receptor (A1R) is a promising target for pain treatment. However, the development of therapeutic agonists is hampered by adverse effects, mainly including sedation, bradycardia, hypotension, or respiratory depression. Recently discovered molecules able to overcome this impediment are the positive allosteric modulator MIPS521 and the A1R-selective agonist BnOCPA, which are both potent and powerful analgesics with fewer side effects. While BnOCPA directly activates the A1R from the canonical orthosteric site, MIPS521 binds to an allosteric site, acting in concert with orthosteric adenosine and tuning its pharmacology. Given their overlapping profile in pain models but distinct mechanisms of action, we combined pharmacology and microsecond molecular dynamics simulations to address MIPS521 and BnOCPA activity and their reciprocal influence when bound to the A1R. We show that MIPS521 changes adenosine and BnOCPA G protein selectivity in opposite ways and propose a structural model where TM7 dynamics are differently affected and involved in the G protein preferences of adenosine and BnOCPA.
Handle
https://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/202776
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cells-13-02121.pdftextAdobe PDF2.37 MBAttribution (CC BY 4.0)publishedOpen
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