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Papers of the Week


Papers: 1 Aug 2020 - 7 Aug 2020


Animal Studies, Pharmacology/Drug Development


2020 Jul 30


Neuropharmacology

Small molecule somatostatin receptor subtype 4 (sst) agonists are novel anti-inflammatory and analgesic drug candidates.

Authors

Szőke É, Bálint M, Hetényi C, Markovics A, Elekes K, Pozsgai G, Szűts T, Kéri G, Őrfi L, Sándor Z, Szolcsányi J J, Pintér E, Helyes Z
Neuropharmacology. 2020 Jul 30:108198.
PMID: 32739276.

Abstract

We provided strong proof of concept evidence that somatostatin mediates potent analgesic and anti-inflammatory actions via its receptor subtype 4 (sst) located both at the periphery and the central nervous system. Therefore, sst agonists are promising novel drug candidates for neuropathic pain and neurogenic inflammation, but rational drug design was not possible due to the lack of knowledge about its 3-dimensional structure. We modeled the sst receptor structure, described its agonist binding properties, and characterized the binding of our novel small molecule sst agonists (4-phenetylamino-7H-pyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidine derivatives) using an in silico platform. In addition to the in silico binding data, somatostatin displacement by Compound 1 was demonstrated in the competitive binding assay on sst-expressing cells. In vivo effects were investigated in rat models of neurogenic inflammation and chronic traumatic neuropathic pain. We defined high- and low-affinity binding pockets of sst for our ligands, binding of the highest affinity compounds were similar to that of the reference ligand J-2156. We showed potent G-protein activation with the highest potency of 10 nM EC value and highest efficacy of 342%. Oral administration of 100 μg/kg of 5 compounds significantly inhibited acute neurogenic plasma protein extravasation in the paw skin by 40-60%, one candidate abolished and 3 others diminished sciatic nerve-ligation induced neuropathic hyperalgesia by 28-62%. The in silico predictions on sst-ligands were tested in biological systems. Low oral dose of our novel agonists inhibit neurogenic inflammation and neuropathic pain, which opens promising drug developmental perspectives for these unmet medical need conditions.