Departments of Biochemistry and Anesthesiology, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York.
Departments of Biochemistry and Anesthesiology, School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, New York
Mol Pharmacol. 2020 Sep;98(3):203-210. doi: 10.1124/mol.120.119784. Epub 2020 Jun 29.
Ketamine, a dissociative anesthetic, is experiencing a clinical resurgence as a fast-acting antidepressant. In the central nervous system, ketamine acts primarily by blocking NMDA receptor currents. Although it is generally safe in a clinical setting, it can be addictive, and several of its derivatives are being investigated as preferable alternatives. 2,6-Hydroxynorketamine (HNK), a ketamine metabolite, reproduces some of the therapeutic effects of ketamine and appears to lack abuse liability. Here, we report a systematic investigation of the effects of HNK on macroscopic responses elicited from recombinant NMDA receptors expressed in human embryonic kidney 293 cells. We found that, like ketamine, HNK reduced NMDA receptor currents in a dose-, pH-, and voltage-dependent manner. Relative to ketamine, it had 100-fold-lower potency (46 µM at pH 7.2), 10-fold-slower inhibition onset, slower apparent dissociation rate, weaker voltage dependence, and complete competition by magnesium. Notably, HNK inhibition was fully effective when applied to resting receptors. These results revealed unexpected properties of hydroxynorketamine that warrant its further investigation as a possible therapeutic in pathologies associated with NMDA receptor dysfunction. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: NMDA receptors are excitatory ion channels with fundamental roles in synaptic transmission and plasticity, and their dysfunction associates with severe neuropsychiatric disorders. 2,6Hydroxynorketamine, a metabolite of ketamine, mimics some of the neuroactive properties of ketamine and may lack its abuse liability. Results show that 2,6-hydroxynorketamine blocks NMDA receptor currents with low affinity and weak voltage dependence and is effective when applied to resting receptors. These properties highlight its effectiveness to a subset of NMDA receptor responses and recommend it for further investigation.
氯胺酮是一种分离性麻醉剂,目前作为一种快速起效的抗抑郁药在临床上重新受到关注。在中枢神经系统中,氯胺酮主要通过阻断 NMDA 受体电流起作用。尽管在临床环境中通常是安全的,但它可能具有成瘾性,并且正在研究其几种衍生物作为更可取的替代品。2,6-羟基去甲氯胺酮(HNK)是氯胺酮的一种代谢物,它复制了氯胺酮的一些治疗效果,并且似乎缺乏滥用倾向。在这里,我们报告了一项对 HNK 对在人胚肾 293 细胞中表达的重组 NMDA 受体引起的宏观反应的影响的系统研究。我们发现,与氯胺酮类似,HNK 以剂量、pH 和电压依赖性方式减少 NMDA 受体电流。与氯胺酮相比,其效力低 100 倍(在 pH 7.2 时为 46 µM),抑制起始速度快 10 倍,解离速率较慢,电压依赖性较弱,并且完全被镁竞争。值得注意的是,当应用于静息受体时,HNK 抑制是完全有效的。这些结果揭示了羟去甲氯胺酮的意外特性,这使其作为与 NMDA 受体功能障碍相关的病理的潜在治疗方法值得进一步研究。
NMDA 受体是具有基本突触传递和可塑性作用的兴奋性离子通道,其功能障碍与严重的神经精神疾病有关。2,6-羟基去甲氯胺酮是氯胺酮的一种代谢物,它模拟了氯胺酮的一些神经活性特性,并且可能缺乏其滥用倾向。结果表明,2,6-羟基去甲氯胺酮以低亲和力和弱电压依赖性阻断 NMDA 受体电流,并且在应用于静息受体时有效。这些特性突出了其对 NMDA 受体反应的一部分的有效性,并推荐对其进行进一步研究。