A growing number of orphan G-protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) have been reported to be activated by lipid ligands, such as lysophosphatidic acid, sphingosine 1-phosphate (S1P), and cannabinoids, for which there are already well established receptors. These new ligand claims are controversial due to either lack of independent confirmations or conflicting reports. We used the -arrestin PathHunter TM assay system, a newly developed, generic GPCR assay format that measures -arrestin binding to GPCRs, to evaluate lipid receptor and ligand pairing. This assay eliminates interference from endogenous receptors on the parental cells because it measures a signal that is specifically generated by the tagged receptor and is immediately downstream of receptor activation. We screened a large number of newly "deorphaned" receptors (GPR23, GPR92, GPR55, G2A, GPR18, GPR3, GPR6, GPR12, and GPR63) and control receptors against a collection of ϳ400 lipid molecules to try to identify the receptor ligand in an unbiased fashion. GPR92 was confirmed to be a lysophosphatidic acid receptor with weaker responses to farnesyl pyrophosphate and geranylgeranyl diphosphate. The putative cannabinoid receptor GPR55 responded strongly to AM251, rimonabant, and lysophosphatidylinositol but only very weakly to endocannabinoids. G2A receptor was confirmed to be an oxidized free fatty acid receptor. In addition, we discovered that 3,3-diindolylmethane, a dietary molecule from cruciferous vegetables, which has known anti-cancer properties, to be a CB 2 receptor partial agonist, with binding affinity around 1 M. The anti-inflammatory effect of 3,3-diindolylmethane in RAW264.7 cells was shown to be partially mediated by CB 2 .
Improved rationally designed lead drug structures against African trypanosomiasis, Chagas disease, and leishmaniasis were obtained against trypanothione reductase from Trypanosoma cruzi. Substituted-benzyl [3-(2-chloro-4a, 10a-dihydrophenothiazin-10-yl)propyl]dimethylammonium salts, synthesized by Menschutkin quaternization of the tertiary alkylamine omega-nitrogen atom of chlorpromazine, were linear, competitive inhibitors of recombinant trypanothione reductase from T. cruzi, with either trypanothione disulfide or N-benzyloxycarbonyl-L-cysteinylglycyl 3-dimethylaminopropylamide disulfide as substrate. The permanent positive charge on the distal nitrogen atom of the tricyclic side chain contribution to binding was estimated as >/=5.6 kcal.mol(-1) by comparison with the analogue with the cationic nitrogen atom of the quaternary replaced by an ether oxygen atom. A further major contribution to improving K(i) values and inhibition strength was the hydrophobic natures and structures of the N-benzyl substituents. The strongest inhibitor, the [3-(2-chloro-4a,10a-dihydrophenothiazin-10-yl)propyl](3, 4-dichlorobenzyl)dimethylammonium derivative (K(i) 0.12 microM), was approximately 2 orders of magnitude more inhibitory than the parent chlorpromazine. Several of these quaternary phenothiazines completely inhibited T. brucei parasite growth in vitro at <1 microM. Antiparasite activity was not solely determined by inhibition strength against trypanothione reductase, there being a strong contribution from hydrophobicity (for example, benzhydryl-quaternized chlorpromazime had ED(50) < 1 microM). Although active against Leishmania donovani, none of the analogues showed major improvement in this activity relative to chlorpromazine or other nonquaternized phenothiazines. The p-tert-butylbenzyl-quaternized analogue very strongly inhibited (ED(50) < 1 microM) growth of the amastigote stage of T. cruzi.
Given the role of trypanothione in the redox defenses of pathogenic trypanosomal and leishmanial parasites, in contrast to glutathione for their mammalian hosts, selective inhibitors of trypanothione reductase are potential drug leads against trypanosomiasis and leishmaniasis. In the present study, the rational drug design approach was used to discover tricyclic neuroleptic molecular frameworks as lead structures for the development of inhibitors, selective for trypanothione reductase over host glutathione reductase. From a homology-modeled structure for trypanothione reductase, replaced in the later stages of the study by the X-ray coordinates for the enzyme from Crithidia fasciculata, a series of inhibitors based on phenothiazine was designed. These were shown to be reversible inhibitors of trypanothione reductase from Trypanosoma cruzi, linearly competitive with trypanothione as substrate and noncompetitive with NADPH, consistent with ping-pong bi bi kinetics. Analogues, synthesized to define structure-activity relationships for the active site, included N-acylpromazines, 2-substituted phenothiazines, and trisubstituted promazines. Analysis of Ki and I50 data, on the basis of calculated log P and molar refractivity values, provided evidence of a specially favored fit of small 2-substituents (especially 2-chloro and 2-trifluoromethyl), with a remote hydrophobic patch on the enzyme accessible for larger, hydrophobic 2-substituents. There was also evidence of an additional hydrophobic enzymic region available to suitable N-substituents of the promazine nucleus. Ki data also indicated that the phenothiazine nucleus can adopt more than one inhibitory orientation in its binding site. Selected compounds were tested for in vitro activity against Trypanosoma brucei, T. cruzi, and Leishmania donovani, with selective activities in the micromolar range being determined for a number of them.
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