Vornov J J, Hollinger K R, Jackson P F, Wozniak K M, Farah M H, Majer P, Rais R, Slusher B S
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States; Medpace, Cincinnati, OH, United States.
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, United States.
Adv Pharmacol. 2016;76:215-55. doi: 10.1016/bs.apha.2016.01.007. Epub 2016 Mar 18.
Nearly two decades ago, Joe Coyle published a single-authored review with the provocative title, The Nagging Question of the Function of N-Acetylaspartylglutamate (Coyle, 1997). In this review, Coyle documented NAAG's localization to subpopulations of glutamatergic, cholinergic, GABAergic, and noradrenergic neurons, Ca(2+)-dependent release, mGlu3 receptor agonist and NMDA receptor antagonist activity, and cleavage by the glial enzyme glutamate carboxypeptidase II (GCPII). However, at the time of his review, NAAG's physiological function as a neurotransmitter remained elusive. Ironically his review was published months following the discovery of the first potent and selective GCPII inhibitor, 2-(phosphonomethyl)pentanedioc acid (2-PMPA) (Jackson et al., 1996). Over the ensuing decades, over a dozen independent laboratories used 2-PMPA and other GCPII inhibitors to elucidate two distinct neurotransmitter functions for NAAG. Under basal conditions, when GCPII activity is relatively low, intact NAAG dampens synaptic activity via presynaptic mGlu3 receptor activation and NMDA receptor blockade. However, under stimulated conditions, NAAG release and GCPII activity are enhanced resulting in excess glutamate generation, activating NMDA and other glutamate receptors, often pathologically. Diverse classes of GCPII inhibitors have been synthesized and shown to increase NAAG, decrease glutamate, and provide robust efficacy in many disease models wherein abnormal glutamatergic transmission is presumed pathogenic. In addition, over the past 20 years, basic questions regarding NAAG's synthesis, packaging into vesicles, and receptor selectivity profile have been eloquently elucidated. The purpose of this chapter is to summarize these advances and the promise of regulating NAAG metabolism through GCPII inhibition as a therapeutic strategy.
近二十年前,乔·科伊尔发表了一篇独著综述,标题颇具挑衅性,即《N-乙酰天门冬氨酰谷氨酸功能的棘手问题》(科伊尔,1997年)。在这篇综述中,科伊尔记录了NAAG在谷氨酸能、胆碱能、γ-氨基丁酸能和去甲肾上腺素能神经元亚群中的定位、钙依赖释放、代谢型谷氨酸受体3(mGlu3)激动剂和N-甲基-D-天冬氨酸(NMDA)受体拮抗剂活性,以及被胶质酶谷氨酸羧肽酶II(GCPII)裂解的情况。然而,在他撰写综述时,NAAG作为神经递质的生理功能仍不明确。具有讽刺意味的是,他的综述在首个强效且选择性的GCPII抑制剂2-(膦酰甲基)戊二酸(2-PMPA)被发现数月后发表(杰克逊等人,1996年)。在随后的几十年里,十几个独立实验室使用2-PMPA和其他GCPII抑制剂阐明了NAAG的两种不同神经递质功能。在基础条件下,当GCPII活性相对较低时,完整的NAAG通过突触前mGlu3受体激活和NMDA受体阻断来抑制突触活动。然而,在刺激条件下,NAAG释放和GCPII活性增强,导致谷氨酸生成过多,常常以病理方式激活NMDA和其他谷氨酸受体。已合成了多种类型的GCPII抑制剂,并显示它们能增加NAAG、减少谷氨酸,并在许多假定异常谷氨酸能传递具有致病性的疾病模型中提供强大疗效。此外,在过去20年里,关于NAAG的合成、包装到囊泡以及受体选择性概况的基本问题已得到充分阐明。本章的目的是总结这些进展以及通过抑制GCPII来调节NAAG代谢作为一种治疗策略的前景。