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Cannabinoid CB receptor ligand profiling reveals biased signalling and off-target activity

Authors :
Soethoudt, Marjolein
Grether, Uwe
Fingerle, Jürgen
Grim, Travis W
Fezza, Filomena
de Petrocellis, Luciano
Ullmer, Christoph
Rothenhäusler, Benno
Perret, Camille
van Gils, Noortje
Finlay, David
MacDonald, Christa
Chicca, Andrea
Gens, Marianela Dalghi
Stuart, Jordyn
de Vries, Henk
Mastrangelo, Nicolina
Xia, Lizi
Alachouzos, Georgios
Baggelaar, Marc P
Martella, Andrea
Mock, Elliot D
Deng, Hui
Heitman, Laura H
Connor, Mark
Di Marzo, Vincenzo
Gertsch, Jürg
Lichtman, Aron H
Maccarrone, Mauro
Pacher, Pal
Glass, Michelle
van der Stelt, Mario
Hematology laboratory
Other Research
General practice
Source :
Soethoudt, M, Grether, U, Fingerle, J, Grim, T W, Fezza, F, de Petrocellis, L, Ullmer, C, Rothenhäusler, B, Perret, C, van Gils, N, Finlay, D, MacDonald, C, Chicca, A, Gens, M D, Stuart, J, de Vries, H, Mastrangelo, N, Xia, L, Alachouzos, G, Baggelaar, M P, Martella, A, Mock, E D, Deng, H, Heitman, L H, Connor, M, Di Marzo, V, Gertsch, J, Lichtman, A H, Maccarrone, M, Pacher, P, Glass, M & van der Stelt, M 2017, ' Cannabinoid CB receptor ligand profiling reveals biased signalling and off-target activity ', Nature Communications, vol. 8, pp. 13958 . https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms13958, Nature Communications, 8. Nature Publishing Group
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

The cannabinoid CB2 receptor (CB2R) represents a promising therapeutic target for various forms of tissue injury and inflammatory diseases. Although numerous compounds have been developed and widely used to target CB2R, their selectivity, molecular mode of action and pharmacokinetic properties have been poorly characterized. Here we report the most extensive characterization of the molecular pharmacology of the most widely used CB2R ligands to date. In a collaborative effort between multiple academic and industry laboratories, we identify marked differences in the ability of certain agonists to activate distinct signalling pathways and to cause off-target effects. We reach a consensus that HU910, HU308 and JWH133 are the recommended selective CB2R agonists to study the role of CB2R in biological and disease processes. We believe that our unique approach would be highly suitable for the characterization of other therapeutic targets in drug discovery research.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20411723
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Soethoudt, M, Grether, U, Fingerle, J, Grim, T W, Fezza, F, de Petrocellis, L, Ullmer, C, Rothenhäusler, B, Perret, C, van Gils, N, Finlay, D, MacDonald, C, Chicca, A, Gens, M D, Stuart, J, de Vries, H, Mastrangelo, N, Xia, L, Alachouzos, G, Baggelaar, M P, Martella, A, Mock, E D, Deng, H, Heitman, L H, Connor, M, Di Marzo, V, Gertsch, J, Lichtman, A H, Maccarrone, M, Pacher, P, Glass, M & van der Stelt, M 2017, ' Cannabinoid CB receptor ligand profiling reveals biased signalling and off-target activity ', Nature Communications, vol. 8, pp. 13958 . https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms13958, Nature Communications, 8. Nature Publishing Group
Accession number :
edsair.dedup.wf.001..79cb2270d7ac6960e1ec0aad30621279