Long-Acting κ Opioid Antagonists Disrupt Receptor Signaling And Produce Noncompetitive Effects By Activating C-Jun N-Terminal Kinase

Journal of Biological Chemistry
2007.0

Abstract

Norbinaltorphimine (NorBNI), guanidinonaltrindole, and atrans-(3R,4R)-dimethyl-4-(3-hydroxyphenyl) piperidine (JDTic) are selective kappa opioid receptor (KOR) antagonists having very long durations of action in vivo despite binding non-covalently in vitro and having only moderately high affinities. Consistent with this, we found that antagonist treatment significantly reduced the subsequent analgesic response of mice to the KOR agonist U50,488 in the tail-withdrawal assay for 14-21 days. Receptor protection assays were designed to distinguish between possible explanations for this anomalous effect, and we found that mice pretreated with the readily reversible opioid antagonists naloxone or buprenorphine before norBNI responded strongly in the tail-flick analgesia assay to a subsequent challenge with U50,488 1 week later. Protection by a rapidly cleared reagent indicates that norBNI did not persist at the site of action. In vitro binding of [(3)H]U69,593 to KOR showed that K(d) and Bmax values were not significantly affected by prior in vivo norBNI exposure, indicating that the agonist binding site was intact. Consistent with the concept that the long-lasting effects might be caused by a functional disruption of KOR signaling, both norBNI and JDTic were found to stimulate c-Jun N-terminal kinase (JNK) phosphorylation in HEK293 cells expressing KOR-GFP but not in untransfected cells. Similarly, norBNI increased phospho-JNK in both the striatum and spinal cord in wild type mice but not in KOR knock-out mice. Pretreatment of mice with the JNK inhibitor SP600125 before norBNI attenuated the long acting antagonism. Together, these results suggest that the long duration KOR antagonists disrupt KOR signaling by activating JNK.

Knowledge Graph

Similar Paper

Long-Acting κ Opioid Antagonists Disrupt Receptor Signaling And Produce Noncompetitive Effects By Activating C-Jun N-Terminal Kinase
Journal of Biological Chemistry 2007.0
Novel fluoroalkyl derivatives of selective kappa opioid receptor antagonist JDTic: Design, synthesis, pharmacology and molecular modeling studies
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2015.0
Development of κ Opioid Receptor Antagonists
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2013.0
Discovery of a Highly Selective and Potent κ Opioid Receptor Agonist from N-Cyclopropylmethyl-7α-phenyl-6,14-endoethanotetrahydronorthebaines with Reduced Central Nervous System (CNS) Side Effects Navigated by the Message–Address Concept
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2019.0
Putative Kappa Opioid Heteromers As Targets for Developing Analgesics Free of Adverse Effects
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2014.0
Selective kappa opioid antagonists for treatment of addiction, are we there yet?
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2017.0
Opioid Receptor Modulators with a Cinnamyl Group
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2017.0
The Macrocyclic Peptide Natural Product CJ-15,208 Is Orally Active and Prevents Reinstatement of Extinguished Cocaine-Seeking Behavior
Journal of Natural Products 2013.0
Naltrindole-5'-isothiocyanate: a nonequilibrium, highly selective .delta.-opioid receptor antagonist
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 1990.0
Design and Characterization of a Potent and Selective Dual ATP- and Substrate-Competitive Subnanomolar Bidentate c-Jun N-Terminal Kinase (JNK) Inhibitor
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2011.0