Pharmacological characterization of CGP 12177 at the human β2‐adrenoceptor
- 1 October 2002
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in British Journal of Pharmacology
- Vol. 137 (3) , 400-408
- https://doi.org/10.1038/sj.bjp.0704855
Abstract
1 It has recently been reported that CGP 12177 can act as an agonist at a novel secondary site within the human beta(1)-adrenoceptor. The aim of this study was to undertake a detailed pharmacological study of the effects of CGP 12177 on the human beta(2)-adrenoceptor. 2 CGP 12177 acted as a potent partial agonist of (3)H-cyclic AMP accumulation (log EC(50)-8.90+/-0.06) and CRE-mediated reporter gene transcription (log EC(50)-9.66+/-0.04) in CHO-K1 cells expressing the human beta(2)-adrenoceptor. These CGP-induced responses were antagonized by the beta(2)-selective antagonist ICI 118551 (apparent log K(D) values of -8.84+/-0.15 and -9.51+/-0.02 for the cyclic AMP and reporter gene responses respectively). 3 CGP 12177 was also able to antagonize both cyclic AMP and reporter gene responses to more efficacious beta(2)-agonists with similar log K(D) values (e.g. -9.57+/-0.15 and -10.04+/-0.096 respectively with salbutamol as agonist). 4 (3)H-CGP 12177 binding to beta(2)-adrenoceptors in intact CHO-beta(2) cells yielded a log K(D) value of -9.84+/-0.06, but indicated that the ligand dissociates very slowly from the receptor (t(1/2) for dissociation=65 min). However, studies with a Green Fluorescent Protein (GFP)-tagged beta(2)-adrenoceptor indicated that CGP 12177 does not stimulate beta(2)-adrenoceptor internalization. 5 This study demonstrates that CGP 12177 is a high affinity partial agonist of both cAMP accumulation and CRE-mediated gene transcription at the human beta(2)-adrenoceptor. It provides no evidence that CGP 12177 can discriminate a secondary site on the beta(2)-adrenoceptor analogous to that observed for the human beta(1)-adrenoceptor. However, despite its very weak actions on cAMP accumulation, the potent agonist effects of CGP 12177 on CRE-mediated gene transcription at the human beta(2)-adrenoceptor, coupled with its long duration of action, offers a potential lead for drug development for the treatment of chronic inflammatory airway diseases.Keywords
This publication has 43 references indexed in Scilit:
- Reporter-gene systems for the study of G-protein-coupled receptorsCurrent Opinion in Pharmacology, 2001
- Is paradoxical pharmacology a strategy worth pursuing?Trends in Pharmacological Sciences, 2001
- Non‐competitive antagonism of β2‐agonist‐mediated cyclic AMP accumulation by ICI 118551 in BC3H1 cells endogenously expressing constitutively active β2‐adrenoceptorsBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 2000
- Ligand regulation of green fluorescent protein‐tagged forms of the human β1‐ and β2‐adrenoceptors; comparisons with the unmodified receptorsBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 2000
- Influence of receptor number on the stimulation by salmeterol of gene transcription in CHO‐K1 cells transfected with the human β2‐adrenoceptorBritish Journal of Pharmacology, 1998
- Anomalous Behavior of CGP 12177A ON β2-Adrenergic ReceptorsJournal of Receptors and Signal Transduction, 1996
- Radioligand binding studies of the atypical β3‐adrenergic receptor in rat brown adipose tissue using [3H]CGP 12177FEBS Letters, 1992
- Radioligand binding characteristics of β2–adrenoceptors of cultured melanoma cellsBritish Journal of Dermatology, 1990
- Binding of the hydrophilic β-adrenergic antagonist [3H]CGP-12177 to cardiac tissue slices: characterization and ontogenetic studies in dogsCanadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology, 1987
- Temperature-dependent binding of hydrophilic β-adrenergic receptor ligands to intact human lymphocytesLife Sciences, 1986