2022
DOI: 10.1101/2022.05.30.494024
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Development of fluorescent peptide G Protein Coupled Receptor activation biosensors for NanoBRET characterisation of intracellular allosteric modulators

Abstract: G protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) are widely therapeutically targeted, and recent advances in allosteric modulator development at this class of receptors offer further potential for exploitation. In particular GPCR intracellular allosteric modulators (IAM) represent a class of ligands that bind to the receptor-effector interface (e.g. G protein) and so inhibit agonist responses non-competitively. This potentially offers a tailored mode of action and greater selectivity between conserved receptor subtypes com… Show more

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“…This high affinity may be the result of a slow dissociation rate from the receptor. , However, to directly determine NAM affinity and binding kinetics, a molecular tool that binds competitively with unlabeled ligands to the intracellular allosteric binding site is needed, which can then be used in real-time analysis of ligand binding. High-affinity fluorescent probes are suitable for this purpose and can be employed in several GPCR binding techniques, including bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) assays. These assays present considerable advantages over radioligand binding assays, traditionally used to characterize ligand binding. A better safety profile allows an easier performance of the assay and disposal of waste materials. , Furthermore, fluorescent ligand-based resonance energy transfer assays have the key capability to monitor specific binding in a homogeneous format, without the need to separate bound from the free tracer, and the binding from a single sample can be monitored continuously in real time, enabling kinetic analysis to be performed in a straightforward manner.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This high affinity may be the result of a slow dissociation rate from the receptor. , However, to directly determine NAM affinity and binding kinetics, a molecular tool that binds competitively with unlabeled ligands to the intracellular allosteric binding site is needed, which can then be used in real-time analysis of ligand binding. High-affinity fluorescent probes are suitable for this purpose and can be employed in several GPCR binding techniques, including bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) assays. These assays present considerable advantages over radioligand binding assays, traditionally used to characterize ligand binding. A better safety profile allows an easier performance of the assay and disposal of waste materials. , Furthermore, fluorescent ligand-based resonance energy transfer assays have the key capability to monitor specific binding in a homogeneous format, without the need to separate bound from the free tracer, and the binding from a single sample can be monitored continuously in real time, enabling kinetic analysis to be performed in a straightforward manner.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…High-affinity fluorescent probes are suitable for this purpose and can be employed in several GPCR binding techniques, including bioluminescence resonance energy transfer (BRET) assays. 48 53 These assays present considerable advantages over radioligand binding assays, traditionally used to characterize ligand binding. A better safety profile allows an easier performance of the assay and disposal of waste materials.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%