“…Kainate has a 2-carboxypyrrolidine-3-acetic acid backbone, and analogs containing this backbone, known as kainoids (Sonnenberg et al, 1996;Hodgson et al, 2005;Sagot et al, 2008;Bunch and Krogsgaard-Larsen, 2009), include domoic acid (Hampson et al, 1992;Alt et al, 2004) and acromelic acid (Kwak et al, 1992;Smith and McIlhinney, 1992). Agonist potency and efficacy are subunit-specific, because kainate and domoic acid are potent agonists of GluK1 and GluK2 but show low potency at GluK3 receptors (Table 6; Jane et al, 2009).…”