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Structural requirements for novel willardiine derivatives acting as AMPA and kainate receptor antagonists
Author(s) -
More Julia C A,
Troop Helen M,
Dolman Nigel P,
Jane David E
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
british journal of pharmacology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.432
H-Index - 211
eISSN - 1476-5381
pISSN - 0007-1188
DOI - 10.1038/sj.bjp.0705148
Subject(s) - kainate receptor , ampa receptor , chemistry , agonist , antagonist , antagonism , stereochemistry , receptor , pharmacology , glutamate receptor , biochemistry , biology
The natural product willardiine is an AMPA receptor agonist. We have examined the structural changes required to convert willardiine into an antagonist at AMPA and kainate receptors. Structure–activity analysis has been carried out to discover the structural features required to increase the potency and/or selectivity of the antagonists at AMPA or kainate receptors. Reduction of the fast component of the dorsal root‐evoked ventral root potential (fDR‐VRP) has been used to investigate AMPA receptor antagonist activity. To examine antagonist activity at kainate receptors, the ability of compounds to depress kainate‐induced depolarisations of dorsal root fibres was assessed. Blocking ionisation of the uracil ring by adding a methyl group to the N 3 position was not sufficient to convert willardiine into an antagonist. However, willardiine derivatives with a side‐chain bearing a carboxylic acid group at the N 3 ‐position of the uracil ring could antagonise AMPA and kainate receptors.S stereochemistry was optimal for antagonism. When compounds with differing interacidic group chain lengths were compared, a group chain length of two methylene groups was preferable for AMPA receptor antagonism in the series of compounds bearing a carboxyalkyl side chain (UBP275, UBP277 and UBP279 reduced the fDR‐VRP with IC 50 values of 287±41, 23.8±3.9 and 136±17 μ M , respectively). For kainate receptor antagonism, two or three methylene groups were almost equally acceptable (UBP277 and UBP279 reduced dorsal root kainate responses with apparent K D values of 73.1±4.5 and 60.5±4.1 μ M , respectively). Adding an iodo group to the 5‐position of UBP277 and UBP282 enhanced activity at kainate receptors (UBP291 and UBP301 antagonised kainate responses on the dorsal root with apparent K D values of 9.83±1.62 and 5.94±0.63 μ M , respectively). The most useful antagonist identified in this study was UBP301, which was a potent and ∼30‐fold selective kainate receptor antagonist. UBP282 may also be of use in isolating a non‐GluR5‐mediated kainate response.British Journal of Pharmacology (2003) 138 , 1093–1100. doi: 10.1038/sj.bjp.0705148