GPCRs modulate a plethora of physiological processes and mediate the effects of one-third of FDA-approved drugs. Depending on which ligand activates a receptor, it can engage different intracellular transducers. This 'biased signalling' paradigm requires that we now characterize physiological signalling not just by receptors but by ligand-receptor pairs. Ligands eliciting biased signalling may constitute better drugs with higher efficacy and fewer adverse effects. However, ligand bias is very complex, making reproducibility and description challenging. Here, we provide guidelines and terminology for any scientists to design and report ligand bias experiments.The guidelines will aid consistency and clarity, as the basic receptor research and drug discovery communities continue to advance our understanding and exploitation of ligand bias. Scientific insight, biosensors, and analytical methods are still evolving and should benefit from and contribute to the implementation of the guidelines, together improving translation from in vitro to disease-relevant in vivo models.
| INTRODUCTIONThe $800 human GPCRs transduce sensory inputs and systemic signals into appropriate cellular responses in numerous physiological processes. They recognize a vast diversity of signals ranging from photons, tastants and odours to ions, neurotransmitters, hormones, and cytokines (Harding et al., 2021;Wacker, Stevens, & Roth, 2017).Even though GPCRs represent the primary target of 34% of FDAapproved drugs, more than 220 non-olfactory GPCRs have disease associations which are as yet untapped in clinical research (Hauser, Attwood, Rask-Andersen, Schioth, & Gloriam, 2017;Sriram & Insel, 2018). Despite the diversity of extracellular ligands and physiological roles of GPCRs, these cell surface receptors share a conserved molecular fold and intracellular transducers. Agonist binding stabilizes active conformations of the receptor, facilitating the binding of one or more cytosolic transducer proteins. These include the heterotrimeric G proteins consisting of α, β and γ subunits that dissociate to α and βγ upon activation by the receptor. G proteins comprise 16 distinct α subunits and are divided into four families based on homology and associated downstream signalling pathways: G s (G s and