Abstract
GPR139 is an orphan class A G protein-coupled receptor found mainly in the central nervous system. It has its highest expression levels in the hypothalamus and striatum, regions regulating metabolism and locomotion, respectively, and has therefore been suggested as a potential target for obesity and Parkinson’s disease. The two aromatic amino acids L-Trp and L-Phe have been proposed as putative endogenous agonists, and three structurally related benzohydrazide, glycine benzamide, and benzotriazine surrogate agonist series have been published. Herein, we assayed 158 new analogues selected from a pharmacophore model, and identified 12 new GPR139 agonists, containing previously untested bioisosteres. Furthermore, we present the first combined structure-activity relationships, and a refined pharmacophore model to serve as a rationale for future ligand identification and optimization.
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Introduction
G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) constitute the largest family of human membrane proteins1. GPCRs induce cellular signalling upon activation by a range of endogenous ligand types, including neurotransmitters, hormones, nutrients, peptides, and ions2. Approximately 1/3 of all marketed drugs act on GPCRs3. While many GPCRs are well-characterized there are still more than 120 non-olfactory orphan receptors with unknown endogenous ligand(s) and/or function4.
GPR139 is an orphan receptor identified from bioinformatics analysis of the human genome5. It has been shown to have a high mRNA expression in the brain, particularly in the striatum and hypothalamus6,7,8 – suggesting that GPR139 could be involved in movement control7,8,9 and/or the regulation of food intake/metabolism6,10. GPR139 is thus a potential target for the treatment of Parkinson’s disease, obesity, eating disorders, and/or diabetes. The main signal transduction pathway of GPR139 is still not established, as signalling through Gq6,10,11,12, Gs9, Gi8 and G12/137 have all been demonstrated. This ambiguity could be caused by a number of underlying reasons, including lack of studies of cells endogenously expressing the receptor, uncertainty about the endogenous ligand, the use of different cell lines as expression systems, and/or assay variations.
We have previously shown, that aromatic dipeptides and the endogenous L-amino acids tryptophan (L-Trp) and phenylalanine (L-Phe) (Fig. 1) can activate GPR13910 (EC50 of 220, and 320 μM, respectively). In addition, Liu et al. recently reported6,13 that L-Trp and L-Phe stimulate [35S]GTPγS binding in membranes from COS7 cells (EC50 of 26 μM and 31 μM, respectively), a concentration-dependent calcium response in HEK293 cells (EC50 of 49 μM, and 60 μM, respectively), and calcium mobilization in HEK293 (EC50 of 287 μM and 411 μM, respectively). This shows that these two aromatic amino acids activate GPR139, with EC50 values in the 30–300 μM range. However, it cannot be excluded that the physiological activation of GPR139 is mediated by another more potent endogenous ligand.
Surrogate small molecule ligands for GPR139 have been reported by Hu et al.9, Shi et al. from Lundbeck A/S11, Dvorak et al. from Jansen R&D13,14, and Hitchcock et al. from Takeda Pharmaceutical Company Limited15. The most potent surrogate agonists are compounds 1a (EC50 = 39 nM), 7c (EC50 = 16 nM), and 39 (EC50 = 6 nM), from Shi et al., Dvorak et al. and Hitchcock et al., respectively (Fig. 1 and Tables 1, 2 and 3). Herein, we have screened our pharmacophore model10 against ~6 million drug-like compounds to identify more diverse agonist analogues, and conducted a joint structure-activity relationship (SAR) study together with the three published series.
Results
New agonist ligands and bioisosteres
Our search for GPR139 ligands featured an initial pharmacophore screening followed by three cycles of assaying in the Fluo-4 Ca2+-assay and analogue purchases, and covered in total 158 compounds (Supplementary Chart 1). This yielded 12 novel GPR139 agonists with efficacies similar to compound 1a (EC50 = 39 nM) and potencies ranging from 364 nM to 4.7 μM (Fig. 2 and Table 4). These contain previously untested bioisosteres of the terminal aromatic systems (Table 5), as well as variations of the linker compared to the published reference agonists. The 12 novel agonists did not show activity in the CHO-M1 receptor cell line in the Fluo-4 Ca2+-assay, indicating specific interactions with the GPR139.
Characterisation of the preferred signalling pathway
Due to the different signalling pathway reported in the literature6,10,11,12, we tested two of the most potent known surrogate agonists; 7c and 1a, the L-Trp and L-Phe and the submicromolar compounds (DL43, DL126, DL24, DL22, DL132 and DL130) in the cAMP dynamic 2 assay (CisBio) and IP-One HTRF® assay (CisBio) to check for biased signalling in the Gs, Gi and Gq coupled assay. None of the tested compounds induced Gs response in CHO-139 or in CHO-M1 cells (Supplementary Fig. 1), which was included as a control. Furthermore none of the tested compounds were able to inhibit the cAMP response induced by 5 μM forskolin in the CHO-139 cells by activating Gi, except L-Trp, which inhibits the 5 μM forskolin induced cAMP response by more than 10% in high concentrations, indicating Gi activation (Supplementary Fig. 2). However, this response was seen in both CHO-139 and CHO-M1 and is therefore an unspecific response. Hence, based on our data the compounds described herein activate GPR139 in CHO-k1 cells through the Gq pathway, which is shown with both the Fluo-4 Ca2+-assay (Fig. 2 and Table 4) and the IP-One assay (Fig. 3A and Table 6). Furthermore, we show that the compounds activate CHO-GPR139 specifically through GPR139, as no response is seen in CHO-M1 cells (Fig. 3B).
Overall there was a good correlation between potencies observed in the Fluo-4 Ca2+-assay and the IP-One assay with compounds generally being 10–40 fold more potent in the former. This has been observed previously and has been ascribed to spare receptors where only a small proportion of receptors need to be activated to elicit a full calcium response16. Interestingly, the DL-compounds tested in both assays behave as full agonists in the Fluo-4 Ca2+-assay but as partial agonists in the IP-One assay. Moreover, racemic 7c and L-Trp behave as super-agonists compared to compound 1a (Table 6). The IP-One assay is thus superior in differentiating the efficacy of the compounds.
Collective SAR – A common motif of two terminal phenyl rings, R1 and R2, separated by a 6-atom linker
The lowest energy conformations of the three most potent published reference agonists 1a, 7c and 39 demonstrated a near perfect overlay of their terminal phenyl rings, herein designated R1 and R2 (Tables 1, 2 and 3), and a six atom linker with multiple polar groups (Supplementary Fig. 3). Below we present the first collective SAR analysis of the three series, and our new analogues, which are summarized in the form of a common pharmacophore model (Fig. 4b) that refines our original model used for the virtual screening by incorporating the three latter (new) series.
Linker length
The linker in 1a has a central nitrogen flanked by two amide groups (Table 1). 7c and 39 differ by having a carbon in the third position, in effect making the central portion of the linker a glycine moiety, and by having a methylated aliphatic carbon in the 6th position (Tables 2 and 3) instead of an aromatic carbon in 1a. Our new agonists (Table 4) display variations of either carbon or nitrogen atoms in the positions 3, 5 and 6, specifically: CNC (DL130–132), NCC (DL146), NCN (DL22 and DL144), and NNC (DL148).
Removal of the 5-nitrogen (DL96) in 1a resulted in loss of activity (Fig. 5), indicating that a reduction of the linker length cannot be tolerated. This is consistent with the presence of a shortened linker in many of the inactive analogues, such as DL3, DL5–8, DL15, DL47–48, DL51, DL55, DL59, DL61, DL95, and DL153 (Supplementary Chart 1). However, DL24, in which the 5-position and R2 are fused with a cyclohexyl, makes up an exception maintaining activity (EC50 = 431 nM) despite a shorter linker. Interestingly, DL24 matched the pharmacophore elements well by adopting an atypical out-of-plane conformation between the acceptor (A4) and the aromatic (R1) pharmacophore elements (Supplementary Fig. 4 and Supplementary Chart 1). This may suggest that the cyclization rescues activity by locking the orientation of the R2 phenyl, which is free to rotate in the closest inactive analogues, DL6–8. We also found that generally compounds with linkers longer than 6-atoms, has decreased activity such as compounds 73, 79 and 80 from Hitchcock et al.15 and our inactive ligands DL50, DL78, DL84, DL86, DL98, DL104, DL105, DL113, and DL155 (Supplementary Chart 1).
Linker hydrogen bond features
Removal of the 1-carbonyl oxygen atom (1p and 9 Dvorak et al.) results in loss of activity suggesting that it represents a critical hydrogen bond acceptor (feature A3 in Fig. 4b). Methylation (1t) or carbon substitution (1q) of the 2-nitrogen reduces the potency to the micromolar range suggesting that a hydrogen bond donor in this position is important (feature D5). The 2-nitrogen in 39 lacks a hydrogen bond donor feature, however, 39 and the rest of the Hitchcock et al. set can perfectly fit the suggested pharmacophore model in a horizontally flipped manner (Supplementary Fig. 5) suggesting D5 is still a fair-to-assume pharmacophore feature based on all other ligand sets. In contrast, replacement of the 3-nitrogen with carbon (1r, and all 7a–q) has little effect on potency. Removal of the 4-carbonyl oxygen atom (8 – Dvorak et al.) results in loss of activity suggesting that it represents a critical hydrogen bond acceptor (feature A4). At the 5-position, nitrogen to carbon substitution (1a to 1s) has a marginal (2-fold) effect. The new agonists DL131 and DL132 corroborate this as they maintain the same three moieties in positions 1, 2 and 4, while those in positions 3 and 5 are both absent.
Linker conformational restraints
The series by Hitchcock et al.15 has a constrained linker at the 2-position via a 4-oxo-3,4dihydrobenztriazene ring. This might be a beneficial strategy to lock the aromatic ring and/or the linker 1–2 atoms in a favourable conformation. This is proved by the generally improved potencies in the Hitchcock analogues (e.g. 39 vs. 1a and 7c). In the series by Dvorak et al.13,14, the 3-carbon has been substituted to change the central Gly residue into Ala, Ser, and Phe (10–13). The S-(11), but not R-methylation (10), strongly reduced the potency (compared to 7h). In the Hitchcock et al.15 set, the same effect is seen in compounds 50 and 51 (compared to 46). Furthermore, even with the favourable enantiomer, hydroxymethyl substitution (12) also leads to a significantly reduced potency. Thus, although part of the effect could be mediated by the action of the two flanking sides of the ligands, there is no room for bulk around the 3-position and exclusion volumes were placed accordingly (Fig. 4b). Moreover, the 1- (1p and 8) and 4-carbonyl (9) oxygen atom removal that abrogated activity may have done so partly because of the loss of the sp2 atom configuration, in addition to the loss of the hydrogen bond acceptor character.
DL132 (EC50 = 505 nM) and DL83 (EC50 > 10 μM – very weak agonist) are cyclized between the 5- and 6-positions. This has not been tested before, and it would be intriguing to investigate this cyclization on the two published series. As shown below, the 6-position is often fused with the R2 phenyl, but can also be aliphatic and methylated (7–13). Of note, both the 6-position (S) and (R) enantiomers of 7c13,14 as well as compounds 5 and 6 in the Hitchcock et al. set15 are potent, suggesting no preferred geometry in the binding pocket around this position.
R1 substitution and bioisosteres
Removal of one of the 3,5-diMeO groups reduces potency by ~26-fold in the Shi et al. series (1f vs. 1a), but has no effect in the series by Dvorak et al. (7h vs. 7q), which contains several additional equipotent single or double substituted analogues: methyl (7e), trifluoromethyl (7i), methoxy (7h, 7q) trifluoromethoxy (7j), cyanonitrile (7f), and several halogens (F: 7g; Cl/F: 7o, Br/Cl: 7p). This is also seen in the Hitchcock et al.15 series where R1 has a 3-methoxy (e.g. 18 and 60), methyl (e.g. 28), triflouromethyl (e.g. 43), or several halogens (e.g. F: 14; Cl: 19). Together, this suggests the combined 3,5-substitution is not needed to maintain potency. Interestingly, the alternative pattern of 2,3- (7k) and 2,5-dichloro- substitution (7m) is equipotent to the 3,5-pattern (7n), but unlike the single 3-chloro (7c), the 2-chlorosubstituent (7b) alone displays a slightly reduced potency (~3-fold). This is in line with the series by Shi et al.11 and Hitchcock et al.15 in which a single methoxy in the 2-position (1c, and 3, respectively) is (~16- and 5-fold) less potent than the 3,5-diMeO reference (1a, and 39). This SAR at the 2-position is shared by the 4-position (35, 37 and 1j–m): A third methoxy group into the 4-position (1h) of 1a shows that the substituent can be accommodated, however the single substituent alone (methyl: 35, methoxy: 37, fluoro: 1g, chloro: 7d, and phenoxy: 1i) is not enough to maintain very high activity. Collectively, this shows that the 3-position is essential and can hold either a hydrophobic/halogen or acceptor element (H6/A2), whereas the 2,4, and 5-substitutions are optional (1f, and 36 being exceptions).
With regard to the size of R1 substituents, ethyloxy-substitution in the 2- (1d), and di-ethyl in the 3 and 5-positions (1e) abrogates and significantly reduces activity, respectively (represented as exclusion volumes placed on the third atoms in all of the positions 2,3, and 5). However, smaller substituents on the 2-position (39) can be accommodated in the Takeda set and none of the added exclusion volumes are in contradiction with any of those substituents (Supplementary Fig. 4). In contrast, the 4-position can accommodate the large 1-ethyl-2-methyl-benzoimidazole bioisostere found in multiple active compounds (DL43, DL85, DL164 and DL148). Finally, all active surrogate agonists present an R1 terminal aromatic ring in our series, Shi et al.11, Dvorak et al.13,14, and Hitchcock et al.15, which likely contributes to the potency (feature R1 in Fig. 4b).
The new agonists span three 3,5-diMeO/3-Cl/ 2-Me-phenyl bioisosteres: 1-ethyl-2-methyl-benzoimidazole, benzo[d][1,3]dioxole, and 1H-benzo[d]imidazole (Table 5). The two most potent new agonists share the distal naphthyl (R2) moiety of 1a, while the 3,5-diMeO phenyl (R1) is replaced with 1-ethyl-2-methyl-benzoimidazole (DL43) or benzo[d][1,3]dioxole (DL126). Their potencies are ~10-fold lower than that of 1a (in the Fluo-4 Ca2+-assay) but part of this could be attributed to a nitrogen-to-carbon substitution at linker position 5 (led to ~2.4-fold reduction in 1s vs. 1a). Thus, these two bioisosteres are likely to be nearly equipotent to the reference 3,5-diMeO- and 3-Cl-phenyl moieties. Moreover, our R1 bioisosteres have polar surface area (PSA) and solubility (QPlogS, QPlogPo/w) values comparable to the parent moieties in 1a, 7c, and 39 (Table 5).
R2 substitution and bioisosteres
The series by Dvorak et al.13,14 and Hitchcock et al.15 showed that the 1a naphthyl can be replaced by a benzyl-ethyl, i.e. the distal of the two fused aromatic rings is sufficient to maintain the high potency (feature R2 in Fig. 4 was moved accordingly). Our data showed that replacing the terminal phenyl ring R2 with a hetero-aromatic ring system, e.g. DL8, DL20 and DL40 (Supplementary Chart 1), led to a complete loss of activity. In the Shi et al. series, substitutions in the aromatic ring closest to the linker, could be tolerated in the 2-position (methyl: 1l), but not any of the 4-(bromo: 1j, cyanonitrile: 1k, chloro: 1m), 5-(bromo: 1n), or 7-positions (methoxy: 1o). Furthermore, inactivity was also observed for several compounds with bulky substituents: di-phenylmethyl (DL94, DL80), cyclopentyloxyphenyl (DL134), and pyridinylmethylmorpholine (DL135). However, the large DL85 and DL148 make up exceptions able to exhibit activity (EC50 = 1.02 μM and 4.7 μM, respectively). In the series by Hitchcock et al. small substitutions on R2 seems tolerable and sometimes even favourable (1 vs. 5). Taken together, this suggests a tight fit to the receptor-binding cavity in some positions around R2 (exclusion volumes are added at positions 4, 5 and 7 accordingly).
The new agonists span five 1a naphthyl/7c, 39 benzyl bioisosteres: 5,6,7,8-tetrahydronaphthyl, 1,2,3,4-tetrahydroquinoline, thiochromane, naphtha[2,1-b]furan, and 2,3-dihydro-1H-indene (Table 5). All bioisosteres are fused ring systems with a non-aromatic first ring, except the naphtha[2,1-b]furan, which notably has three fused aromatic rings. Similar to R1, our R2 bioisosteres have polar surface area and solubility values comparable to the parent moieties in 1a, 7c, and 39 (Table 5).
Common pharmacophore model
Pharmacophore composition
The above collective SAR was used to construct the updated pharmacophore model in Fig. 4B, and the detailed mapping of analogues into features is listed in the last columns of Tables 1–3. The pharmacophore contains two terminal aromatic features (R1 and R2) separated by a linker containing two hydrogen bond acceptors (A3 and A4), and one hydrogen bond donor (D5). An additional dual hydrophobic/halogen or acceptor element, H6/A2, is placed at position 3 of R1. Finally, exclusion volumes (yellow) have been incorporated to block substituents rendering a reduction or loss of activity.
Pharmacophore Validation
The updated pharmacophore model was matched against all 126 agonists described herein, and 6300 property-matched decoys generated by DUD-E17 (50 decoys/ligand). The pharmacophore matched all known agonists, including the new analogues described herein. A receiver-operating characteristic (ROC) analysis displayed an area under the curve of 0.87 (Fig. 6). The early enrichment (top 1% of matches) was 72% actives, and strikingly 80% of all actives were retrieved already in the first 22% of the entire set, displaying both a good selectivity and sensitivity of the pharmacophore model. Matching of the same set of compounds against our original pharmacophore model (only based on the set by Shi et al.11) displayed a significant improvement (Supplementary Fig. 7). Our refined pharmacophore model successfully filtered out inactive analogues due to the added exclusion volumes, which did not hinder matching of the new series by Hitchcock et al.15 (Supplementary Fig. 6). Collectively, this suggests that the new pharmacophore model can be used to find potentially active analogues in future prospective screenings.
Discussion
The new bioisosteres and the common SAR analysis present features that could be useful in future medicinal chemistry and optimisation studies. For example, a 7c naphthyl to benzyl substitution would be an interesting combination of two of the three published series. From the new linker variants, cyclization of the linker 5- and 6-positions, as in DL132, on the three published series could explore the conformational restraining of the R2-naphthyl and benzyl systems. Additionally, the necessity of the linker 1-position carbonyl oxygen’s lone pair as a hydrogen bond acceptor is clear, but a carbonyl bioisostere, such as a spiro-oxetane, should provide the same electronic function while also testing a slight increase in steric bulk in a region devoid of exclusion volumes. On the other hand, constraining the linker 2-position via cyclization with a 4-oxo-3,4-dihydro-benzotriazene ring as in 39 and the rest of the Hitchcock series, showed a potential beneficial effect for the activity. Furthermore, some of the new bioisosteres might be able to give equivalent or close potencies if introduced to otherwise identical analogues of the reference ligands, while offering slightly modified solubility and polar surface areas (PSA) as described below.
As mentioned by Shi et al. it would be beneficial for brain penetration to reduce the polar surface area of GPR139 agonists11. Blood-brain barrier penetration is achieved when PSA is lower than 90 Å2 18, and the PSA of 1a is just short of this, 88.70 Å2. 1s displays an improved PSA of 76.7 Å2, but failed to increase brain exposure due to low plasma levels11. In contrast, 7c displays good cellular permeability (and no efflux potential), and a brain to plasma ration of 1.214. Some of our bioisosteres could offer slightly more beneficial PSA values (Table 5). For R1, the PSA of 1-ethyl-2-methyl-benzoimidazole is slightly less than that of 3,5-diMeO-phenyl in 1a, and the benzo[d][1,3]dioxole has a comparable value. For R2, 5,6,7,8-tetrahydronaphthyl, thiochromane, and 2,3-dihydro-1 H-inden have equivalent PSA values to the two reference systems.
The PSA must be balanced with the solubility estimated with recommended QPlogS19 values between −1 and −6 mol/dm–3; to achieve CNS penetration typically a QPlogPo/w value below 3.5 is desired. The most soluble R1 bioisosteres are: benzo[d][1,3]dioxole > 1H-benzo[d]imidazole = 3,5-diMeO-phenyl (1a) > 7c 3-Cl-Phenyl, while 1-ethyl-2-methyl-benzoimidazole is comparable to 7c 3-Cl-Phenyl. For R2, 1,2,3,4,tetrahydroquinoline, thiochromane, and 2,3-dihydro-1 H-inden have equivalent or better solubility than 1a. However, the benzyl in 7c remains the option with the lowest values.
Conclusions
In the present study we identified 12 GPR139 agonists (EC50 = 364 nM to 4.7 μM) containing previously untested aromatic bioisosteres, as well as novel linker variants. Our compounds were incorporated in the first combined SAR study of the three most potent series published by Lundbeck A/S, Janssen R&D and Takeda Ltd. This SAR was used to suggest a refined common pharmacophore model, which was able to discriminate between active and inactive compounds. The two proposed endogenous agonists L-Trp and L-Phe overlay with R1 and R2, respectively as well as additional linker functionalities (Supplementary Fig. 8) showing that they too are likely to be accommodated by the common pharmacophore and the same binding site. This study could serve to guide the future ligand identification and optimization efforts. Studies to characterize the pharmacology and function of GPR139, as well as to identify antagonist tool compounds, are ongoing.
Methods
Ligand preparation and conformational search
LigPrep20 was used for ligand preparation. Default QikProp21 settings were used to calculate PSA, QPlogS, and QPlogPo/w values. Macromodel22 was employed to do the conformational analysis on the three potent ligands 1a, 7c, and 39 using default settings. This includes using the OPLS_3 force filed23, and the Monte Carlo approach for sampling the different conformations. The global energy non-collapsed conformation of the ligands was picked for further analysis and superposition. Hitchcock criteria18: Sum of nitrogen and oxygen atoms (N + O) < 5, ClogP – (N + O) > 0, PSA < 90 Å2, and MW < 450 were also employed to assess the bioisosteres.
Pharmacophore screening
The screening database, eMolecules plus24 (~6 million drug-like compounds), was prepared with LigPrep25 to desalt, add hydrogen atoms and generate tautomers, stereoisomers (max 32) and 3D conformations (max 10 ring conformations). Epik and the OPLS 2005 force field26 were applied to generate charge states at pH: 7.0 ± 1.022. LigFilter was used to remove structures with reactive functional groups. The Phase database was prepared with 100 maximum conformers, up to 10 conformations per rotatable bond, thorough conformational sampling, conformational variation of amide bonds and a maximum relative energy difference of 6.0 kcal/mol.
Hit and analog purchases
A minimum of four matching pharmacophore10 elements was required and a preference was set for partial matches involving more sites. Hits were sorted by fitness score and clustered with Canvas27 to select diverse representative structures. After the first assaying round small structure-activity relationship analyses were conducted and the compounds sorted into lead ligand series. The selections of analogs were based on substructures drawn in MarvinSketch and queried in the eMolecules database loaded into Instant JChem (Marvin 5.12.3, 2014 and Instant JChem 6.2.0, 2014, ChemAxon, www.chemaxon.com). Compounds were purchased from Enamine (Kiev, Ukraine).
Compounds and buffers
Compound 1a11 was kindly provided by H. Lundbeck A/S, Denmark. Compound 7c (Enamine no: Z31449867) was tested as a racemate, as the (S)-form described by Janssen et al. was not commercially available. All compounds were dissolved to 20 mM in DMSO (Sigma, D2650) and subsequently diluted in a HEPES buffer (HBSS (Invitrogen, 14025) supplemented with 20 mM HEPES + 1 mM MgCl2 + 1 mM CaCl2, pH = 7.4) to a final concentration 0.5% DMSO in the assay. The DMSO level was kept constant for all concentrations of all compounds. DMSO was confirmed not to have any activity by itself at this concentration10. L-Tryptophan (T0254) and L-Phenylalanine (P2126) were obtained from Sigma-Aldrich and dissolved directly in buffer.
Cell lines
All compounds were tested on a CHO-k1 cell line stably expressing GPR139 (CHO-GPR139) kindly provided by H. Lundbeck A/S, Denmark, and also on a CHO-k1 cell line stably expressing the M1 receptor (CHO-M1) (The Missouri S&T cDNA Resource Center, #CEM100TN00) to check for specificity. The CHO-GPR139 was grown in Dulbecco’s modified eagle medium (DMEM) F12-Kaighn’s (Gibco, 21127) supplemented with 10% dialysed fetal bovine serum (Gibco, 26400, United States origin), 1% GlutaMAXTM-I (100X) (Gibco, 35050), and 100 units/mL penicillin and 100 μg/mL streptomycin (Gibco, 15140) and 1.0 mg/mL geneticin (Invitrogen, 1181103). CHO-M1 was grown in Ham’s F12 (Gibco, 21765) supplemented with 10% fetal bovine serum (Gibco, 10270, South America origin) +100 units/mL penicillin and 100 μg/mL streptomycin (Invitrogen, 15140–122) and 0,25 mg/mL geneticin (Life Technologies, 11811–031). Compound 1a and carbamoylcholine chloride (Sigma-Aldrich, C4382) were used as positive controls in the two cell lines, respectively.
Ca2+-Fluo-4 assay
30.000 cells/well were plated in black 96-well plates with flat clear bottoms (Corning, Falcon, 353219) and incubated overnight. The Fluo-4 dye loading solution (Invitrogen, F36206) was prepared according to the manufacturer’s instructions by dissolving it in HEPES buffer supplemented with 2.5 mM probenecid. 50 μL dye loading solution was added to each well. Cells were incubated with the Fluo-4 dye for 60 min at 37 °C, then washed with 100 μL HEPES buffer. 100 μL HEPES buffer supplemented with 2.5 mM probenecid was then added to each well and incubated in 10 minutes at 37 °C before measurement. 33 μL of the test compounds (4x concentrated) were added automatically after baseline measurements. Intracellular calcium change was recorded on a NOVOstar instrument (BMG Labtech) at 37 °C with an excitation filter of 485 nm and an emission filters 520 nm. Data originate from three independent experiments in triplicates.
IP-One assay
The IP-One assay was performed as described in the work by Thomsen et al.28, with few modifications. Breifly, CHO-139 and CHO-M1 were detached and re-suspended to a concentration of 10 million cells/mL. 5 μL 2x concentrated compound (+40 mM LiCl) and 5 μL cell suspension (50,000 cells/well) was mixed. The plate was sealed and incubated at 37 °C for 1 hour. Next, 10 μL detection reagents (lysis buffer containing 2.5% Eu3+-anti-IP1 antibody and 2.5% IP1-d2) was added and the plate was incubated for 1 hour at room temperature. The plate was read on an Envision (PerkinElmer, Waltham, MA, USA). The time resolved-fluorescence resonance energy transfer (TR-FRET) 665 nm/615 nm ratio, which is inversely proportional to the inositol monophosphate (IP1) accumulation, was used to determine the concentration of the IP1 response.
cAMP assay
The cAMP assay was performed as described in the work by Thomsen et al.28 with few modifications. Breifly, CHO-139 and CHO-M1 was detached and resuspended to a concentration of 1 million cells/mL. 5 μL 2x concentrated compound (for Gs: +100 μM IBMX and for Gi: +100 μM IBMX +10 μM forskolin (Fsk)) and 5 μL cell suspension (5,000 cells/well) was mixed. The plate was sealed and incubated at room temperature for 30 min. Next, 10 μL detection reagents (lysis buffer containing 2.5% Eu3+-anti-cAMP antibody and 2.5% cAMP-d2) was added and the plate was incubated for 1 hour at room temperature. The plate was read on an Envision (PerkinElmer, Waltham, MA, USA). The TR-FRET 665 nm/615 nm ratio, which is inversely proportional with the cAMP production, was used to determination the concentration of the cAMP response.
Generation of a common pharmacophore model
Phase version 4.529 was used to build the new pharmacophore model based on compounds from all GPR139 agonist series (Tables 1–4). Ligand conformations were generated with the thorough sampling option and hypotheses matching the variant AAADHRR (A hydrogen bond acceptor, D hydrogen bond donor, H hydrophobic group, and R aromatic ring) were taken into consideration. The EC50 cut-off was set to 1 μM and the hypothesis matching the defined elements was selected after scoring active and inactive compounds. Exclusion volumes were added to exclude inactive ligands volume sizes were defined based on the size of disfavoured substituents. 2D structures were drawn in MarvinSketch30 and 3D structures were visualized in PyMOL31.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Shehata, M. A. et al. Novel Agonist Bioisosteres and Common Structure-Activity Relationships for The Orphan G Protein-Coupled Receptor GPR139. Sci. Rep. 6, 36681; doi: 10.1038/srep36681 (2016).
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Acknowledgements
This work was supported by grants from the Lundbeck Foundation (R163-2013-16327 to D.E.G.), The Danish Council for Independent Research (DFF – 1331-00180 to D.E.G.) and European Research Council (DE-ORPHAN 639125 to D.E.G.); and the A. P. Møller Foundation for the Advancement of Medical Sciences and the Lundbeck Foundation (H.B.-O.). M.A.S. and A.C.N. acknowledge funding from the Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences.
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V.I. performed the pharmacophore search, D.E.G. purchased analogs, and M.A.S made the SAR analysis with input from K.H. and F.B. A.C.N, D.L., C.B., and K.B.A. performed the pharmacological screening. M.A.S. and A.C.N. drafted the manuscript, which was commented by all authors. D.E.G. and H.B.-O. designed the study and supervised the computational and pharmacological work, respectively.
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Shehata, M., Nøhr, A., Lissa, D. et al. Novel Agonist Bioisosteres and Common Structure-Activity Relationships for The Orphan G Protein-Coupled Receptor GPR139. Sci Rep 6, 36681 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/srep36681
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/srep36681
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