Thompson Miles D, Cole David E C, Capra Valerie, Siminovitch Katherine A, Rovati G Enrico, Burnham W McIntyre, Rana Brinda K
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, Faculty of Medicine, University of Toronto, 1 King's College Circle, Toronto, ON, Canada, M5S 1A8,
Methods Mol Biol. 2014;1175:189-242. doi: 10.1007/978-1-4939-0956-8_9.
Pharmacogenetics investigates the influence of genetic variants on physiological phenotypes related to drug response and disease, while pharmacogenomics takes a genome-wide approach to advancing this knowledge. Both play an important role in identifying responders and nonresponders to medication, avoiding adverse drug reactions, and optimizing drug dose for the individual. G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) are the primary target of therapeutic drugs and have been the focus of these studies. With the advance of genomic technologies, there has been a substantial increase in the inventory of naturally occurring rare and common GPCR variants. These variants include single-nucleotide polymorphisms and insertion or deletions that have potential to alter GPCR expression of function. In vivo and in vitro studies have determined functional roles for many GPCR variants, but genetic association studies that define the physiological impact of the majority of these common variants are still limited. Despite the breadth of pharmacogenetic data available, GPCR variants have not been included in drug labeling and are only occasionally considered in optimizing clinical use of GPCR-targeted agents. In this chapter, pharmacogenetic and genomic studies on GPCR variants are reviewed with respect to a subset of GPCR systems, including the adrenergic, calcium sensing, cysteinyl leukotriene, cannabinoid CB1 and CB2 receptors, and the de-orphanized receptors such as GPR55. The nature of the disruption to receptor function is discussed with respect to regulation of gene expression, expression on the cell surface (affected by receptor trafficking, dimerization, desensitization/downregulation), or perturbation of receptor function (altered ligand binding, G protein coupling, constitutive activity). The large body of experimental data generated on structure and function relationships and receptor-ligand interactions are being harnessed for the in silico functional prediction of naturally occurring GPCR variants. We provide information on online resources dedicated to GPCRs and present applications of publically available computational tools for pharmacogenetic studies of GPCRs. As the breadth of GPCR pharmacogenomic data becomes clearer, the opportunity for routine assessment of GPCR variants to predict disease risk, drug response, and potential adverse drug effects will become possible.
药物遗传学研究基因变异对与药物反应和疾病相关的生理表型的影响,而药物基因组学则采用全基因组方法来推进这方面的知识。两者在识别药物反应者和无反应者、避免药物不良反应以及为个体优化药物剂量方面都发挥着重要作用。G蛋白偶联受体(GPCRs)是治疗药物的主要靶点,一直是这些研究的重点。随着基因组技术的进步,天然存在的罕见和常见GPCR变异的清单大幅增加。这些变异包括单核苷酸多态性以及可能改变GPCR功能表达的插入或缺失。体内和体外研究已经确定了许多GPCR变异的功能作用,但定义这些常见变异大多数生理影响的基因关联研究仍然有限。尽管有广泛的药物遗传学数据,但GPCR变异尚未纳入药物标签,并且在优化GPCR靶向药物的临床应用时仅偶尔被考虑。在本章中,我们将针对GPCR系统的一个子集,包括肾上腺素能、钙敏感受体、半胱氨酰白三烯、大麻素CB1和CB2受体以及孤儿受体如GPR55,综述关于GPCR变异的药物遗传学和基因组学研究。我们将从基因表达调控、细胞表面表达(受受体转运、二聚化、脱敏/下调影响)或受体功能扰动(改变配体结合、G蛋白偶联、组成性活性)方面讨论受体功能破坏的性质。利用在结构与功能关系以及受体 - 配体相互作用方面产生的大量实验数据,对天然存在的GPCR变异进行计算机功能预测。我们提供有关专门针对GPCR的在线资源的信息,并介绍公开可用的计算工具在GPCR药物遗传学研究中的应用。随着GPCR药物基因组学数据的广度变得更加清晰,对GPCR变异进行常规评估以预测疾病风险、药物反应和潜在药物不良反应的机会将成为可能。