2015 May 26. pii: mol.115.098541. [Epub ahead of print]
Iyer MR1, Cinar R1, Liu J1, Godlewski G1, Szanda G1, Puhl H1, Ikeda SR1, Deschamps J2, Lee YS1, Steinbach PJ1, Kunos G3.
Abstract
6-Alkoxy-5-aryl-3-pyridincarboxamides, including the brain penetrant compound 14g and its peripherally restricted analog 14h, have been recently introduced as selective, high affinity antagonists of the human cannabinoid receptor-1 (hCB1R, J. Med. Chem. 56, 9874-96, 2013). Binding analyses revealed two orders of magnitude lower affinity of these compounds for mouse and rat versus human CB1R, whereas the affinity of rimonabant is comparable for all three CB1Rs. Modeling of ligand binding to CB1R and binding assays with native and mutant (Ile105Met) hCB1Rs indicate that the Ile105 to Met mutation in rodent CB1Rs accounts for the species-dependent affinity of 14g and 14h. Our work identifies Ile105 as a new pharmacophore component for developing better hCB1R antagonists, and invalidates rodent models for assessing the antiobesity efficacy of 14g and 14h.
The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.
The American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics.
KEYWORDS:
Cannabinoid; Molecular dynamics; Receptor binding studies; Structure-activity relationships and modeling
- PMID:
- 26013543
- [PubMed – as supplied by publisher]