Open Access
Synthesis and pharmacological characterization of ethylenediamine synthetic opioids in human μ‐opiate receptor 1 (OPRM1) expressing cells
Author(s) -
Hsu Tom,
Mallareddy Jayapal R.,
Yoshida Kayla,
Bustamante Vincent,
Lee Tim,
Krstenansky John L.,
Zambon Alexander C.
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
pharmacology research and perspectives
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.975
H-Index - 27
ISSN - 2052-1707
DOI - 10.1002/prp2.511
Subject(s) - internalization , pharmacology , opiate , receptor , chemistry , enantiomer , medicine , stereochemistry , biochemistry
Abstract Opioids are powerful analgesics acting via the human μ‐opiate receptor (hMOR). Opioid use is associated with adverse effects such as tolerance, addiction, respiratory depression, and constipation. Two synthetic opioids, AH‐7921 and U‐47700 that were developed in the 1970s but never marketed, have recently appeared on the illegal drug market and in forensic toxicology reports. These agents were initially characterized for their analgesic activity in rodents; however, their pharmacology at hMOR has not been delineated. Thus, we synthesized over 50 chemical analogs based on core AH‐7921 and U‐47700 structures to assess for their ability to couple to Gα i signaling and induce hMOR internalization. For both the AH‐7921 and U‐47700 analogs, the 3,4‐dichlorobenzoyl substituents were the most potent with comparable EC 50 values for inhibition of cAMP accumulation; 26.49 ± 11.2 nmol L −1 and 8.8 ± 4.9 nmol L −1 , respectively. Despite similar potencies for Gα i coupling, these two compounds had strikingly different hMOR internalization efficacies: U‐47700 (10 μmol L −1 ) induced ~25% hMOR internalization similar to DAMGO while AH‐7921 (10 μmol L −1 ) induced ~5% hMOR internalization similar to morphine. In addition, the R , R enantiomer of U‐47700 is significantly more potent than the S , S enantiomer at hMOR. In conclusion, these data suggest that U‐47700 and AH‐7921 analogs have high analgesic potential in humans, but with divergent receptor internalization profiles, suggesting that they may exhibit differences in clinical utility or abuse potential.