Biased receptor signalling and intracellular trafficking profiles of structurally distinct formylpeptide receptor 2 agonists.
Br J Pharmacol
; 181(22): 4677-4692, 2024 Nov.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39154373
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND:
There is increasing interest in developing FPR2 agonists (compound 43, ACT-389949 and BMS-986235) as potential pro-resolving therapeutics, with ACT-389949 and BMS-986235 having entered phase I clinical development. FPR2 activation leads to diverse downstream outputs. ACT-389949 was observed to cause rapid tachyphylaxis, while BMS-986235 and compound 43 induced cardioprotective effects in preclinical models. We aim to characterise the differences in ligand-receptor engagement and downstream signalling and trafficking bias profile. EXPERIMENTALAPPROACH:
Concentration-response curves to G protein dissociation, ß-arrestin recruitment, receptor trafficking and second messenger signalling were generated using FPR2 ligands (BMS-986235, ACT-389949, compound 43 and WKYMVm), in HEK293A cells. Log(τ/KA) was obtained from the operational model for bias analysis using WKYMVm as a reference ligand. Docking of FPR2 ligands into the active FPR2 cryoEM structure (PDBID 7T6S) was performed using ICM pro software. KEYRESULTS:
Bias analysis revealed that WKYMVm and ACT-389949 shared a very similar bias profile. In comparison, BMS-986235 and compound 43 displayed approximately 5- to 50-fold bias away from ß-arrestin recruitment and trafficking pathways, while being 35- to 60-fold biased towards cAMP inhibition and pERK1/2. Molecular docking predicted key amino acid interactions at the FPR2 shared between WKYMVm and ACT-389949, but not with BMS-986235 and compound 43. CONCLUSION AND IMPLICATIONS In vitro characterisation demonstrated that WKYMVm and ACT-389949 differ from BMS-986235 and compound 43 in their signalling and protein coupling profile. This observation may be explained by differences in the ligand-receptor interactions. In vitro characterisation provided significant insights into identifying the desired bias profile for FPR2-based pharmacotherapy.Palabras clave
Texto completo:
1
Banco de datos:
MEDLINE
Asunto principal:
Transducción de Señal
/
Transporte de Proteínas
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Receptores de Lipoxina
/
Receptores de Formil Péptido
Límite:
Humans
Idioma:
En
Año:
2024
Tipo del documento:
Article