Center for Clinical Pharmacology, University of Health Sciences & Pharmacy at St Louis and Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, United States.
Center for Clinical Pharmacology, University of Health Sciences & Pharmacy at St Louis and Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, United States.
Prog Mol Biol Transl Sci. 2023;195:153-176. doi: 10.1016/bs.pmbts.2022.06.017. Epub 2022 Aug 5.
Clinical treatment of acute to severe pain relies on the use of opioids. While their potency is significant, there are considerable side effects that can negatively affect patients. Their rise in usage has correlated with the current opioid epidemic in the United States, which has led to more than 70,000 deaths per year (Volkow and Blanco, 2021). Opioid-related drug development aims to make target compounds that show strong potency but with diminished side effects. Research into pharmaceuticals that could act as potential alternatives to current pains medications has relied on mechanistic insights of opioid receptors, a class of G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs), and biased agonism, a common phenomenon among pharmaceutical compounds where downstream effects can be altered at the same receptor via different agonists. Opioids function typically by binding to an active site on the extracellular portion of opioid receptors. Once activated, the opioid receptor initiates a G-protein signaling pathway and/or the β-arrestin2 pathway. The proposed concept for the development of safe analgesics around mu and kappa opioid receptor subtypes has focused on not recruiting β-arrestin2 (biased agonism) and/or having low efficacy at the receptor (partial agonism). By altering chemical motifs on a common scaffold, chemists can take advantage of biased agonism as well as create compounds with low intrinsic efficacy for the desired treatments. This review will focus on ligands with bias profile, signaling aspects of the receptor and probe into the structural basis of receptor that leads to bias and/or partial agonism.
临床治疗急性到重度疼痛依赖于阿片类药物的使用。虽然它们的效力显著,但也有相当多的副作用,会对患者产生负面影响。阿片类药物使用的增加与美国目前的阿片类药物流行有关,这导致每年有超过 70000 人死亡(Volkow 和 Blanco,2021)。阿片类药物相关药物开发旨在使目标化合物具有强大的效力,但副作用减少。研究可能成为现有疼痛药物替代物的药物依赖于阿片受体的机制见解,阿片受体是 G 蛋白偶联受体(GPCR)的一类,以及偏向激动作用,这是一种常见的药物化合物现象,其中下游效应可以通过不同的激动剂在同一受体上改变。阿片类药物通常通过与阿片受体细胞外部分的活性位点结合而起作用。一旦被激活,阿片受体就会启动 G 蛋白信号通路和/或β-arrestin2 通路。围绕μ和κ阿片受体亚型开发安全镇痛药的概念主要集中在不招募β-arrestin2(偏向激动作用)和/或在受体上的低功效(部分激动作用)。通过改变常见支架上的化学基序,化学家可以利用偏向激动作用,并为所需的治疗创造具有低内在功效的化合物。这篇综述将重点介绍具有偏向特征的配体、受体的信号方面,并深入探讨导致偏向性和/或部分激动作用的受体结构基础。