A Novel Nonpeptide Antagonist of the Kinin B1 Receptor: Effects at the Rabbit Receptor
- 1 December 2004
- journal article
- Published by Elsevier in The Journal of Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics
- Vol. 311 (3) , 1121-1130
- https://doi.org/10.1124/jpet.104.071266
Abstract
The kinin B1 receptor (B1R) has attracted interest as a potential therapeutic target because this inducible G protein-coupled receptor is involved in sustained inflammation and inflammatory pain production. Compound 11 (2-{(2R)-1-[(3,4-dichlorophenyl) sulfonyl]-3-oxo-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroquinoxalin-2-yl}-N-{2-[4-(4,5-dihydro-1H-imidazol-2-yl)phenyl]ethyl}acetamide) is a high-affinity nonpeptide antagonist for the human B1R, but it is potent at the rabbit B1R as well: its Ki value for the inhibition of [3H]Lys-des-Arg9-BK (bradykinin) binding to a novel myc-labeled rabbit B1R expressed in COS-1 is 22 pM. In contractility tests (organ bath pharmacology), we found that compound 11 is an apparently surmountable antagonist of des-Arg9-BK- or Lys-des-Arg9-BK-induced contraction of the rabbit isolated aorta (pA2 values of 10.6 ± 0.14 and 10.4 ± 0.12, respectively). It did not influence contractions induced by angiotensin II in the rabbit aorta or by BK or histamine in the jugular vein, but it suppressed the prostaglandin-mediated relaxant effect of des-Arg9-BK on the rabbit isolated mesenteric artery. Compound 11 (1 nM) inhibited both the phosphorylation of the extracellular signal-regulated kinase1/2 mitogen-activated protein kinases induced by Lys-des-Arg9-BK in serum-starved rabbit aortic smooth muscle cells and the agonist-induced translocation of the fusion protein B1R-yellow fluorescent protein expressed in human embryonic kidney (HEK) 293 cells. Compound 11 does not importantly modify the expression of myc-B1R over 24 h in HEK 293 cells (no detectable action as “pharmacological chaperone”). The present results support that compound 11 is a potent and highly selective antagonist suitable for further investigations of the role of the kinin B1R in models of inflammation, pain, and sepsis based on the rabbit.This publication has 41 references indexed in Scilit:
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