Pharmacology of Antagonism of GPCR

  • Kurose, Hitoshi
  • Kim, Sang Geon
Citations

WEB OF SCIENCE

16
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21

초록

Agonists are defined as the ligands that activate intracellular signaling and evoke cellular responses. Synthetic and endogenous agonists should bind specific amino acids to activate G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). Agonists that induce maximal responses are full agonists. Partial agonists cannot induce full responses unlike full agonists. In definition, antagonists inhibit agonist-stimulated responses by binding to orthosteric or allosteric sites. Antagonists modulate agonist-induced responses and are often related with inverse agonist activity. However, the relationship between antagonists and partial agonists is complex. An antagonist behaves as a partial agonist when the constitutive activity of the GPCR is high. In contrast, a partial agonist with very weak intrinsic activity may be classified as an antagonist. Thus, antagonisms of the compounds are influenced by constitutive activity of GPCRs, intrinsic activity and differences in the binding sites of GPCRs. Since "antagonism" has been revealed to have multiple aspects and more complex than previously thought, it may be difficult to classify each compound as simply "agonist" or "antagonist" as before. In this review, we discuss the recent findings and perspectives on the pharmacology of GPCR-binding antagonists, inverse agonists, and signaling.

키워드

G protein-coupled receptorantagonistorthosteric siteallosteric sitepartial agonistbiased activityPROTEIN-COUPLED RECEPTORSALLOSTERIC MODULATORSCONSTITUTIVE ACTIVITYSPECIFICITYP63RHOGEFAGONISMBIAS
제목
Pharmacology of Antagonism of GPCR
저자
Kurose, HitoshiKim, Sang Geon
DOI
10.1248/bpb.b22-00143
발행일
2022-06
유형
Review
저널명
Biological and Pharmaceutical Bulletin
45
6
페이지
669 ~ 674