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How Carvedilol activates β2-adrenoceptors

Authors :
Tobias Benkel
Mirjam Zimmermann
Julian Zeiner
Sergi Bravo
Nicole Merten
Victor Jun Yu Lim
Edda Sofie Fabienne Matthees
Julia Drube
Elke Miess-Tanneberg
Daniela Malan
Martyna Szpakowska
Stefania Monteleone
Jak Grimes
Zsombor Koszegi
Yann Lanoiselée
Shannon O’Brien
Nikoleta Pavlaki
Nadine Dobberstein
Asuka Inoue
Viacheslav Nikolaev
Davide Calebiro
Andy Chevigné
Philipp Sasse
Stefan Schulz
Carsten Hoffmann
Peter Kolb
Maria Waldhoer
Katharina Simon
Jesus Gomeza
Evi Kostenis
Source :
Nature Communications. 13
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Carvedilol is among the most effective β-blockers for improving survival after myocardial infarction. Yet the mechanisms by which carvedilol achieves this superior clinical profile are still unclear. Beyond blockade of β1-adrenoceptors, arrestin-biased signalling via β2-adrenoceptors is a molecular mechanism proposed to explain the survival benefits. Here, we offer an alternative mechanism to rationalize carvedilol’s cellular signalling. Using primary and immortalized cells genome-edited by CRISPR/Cas9 to lack either G proteins or arrestins; and combining biological, biochemical, and signalling assays with molecular dynamics simulations, we demonstrate that G proteins drive all detectable carvedilol signalling through β2ARs. Because a clear understanding of how drugs act is imperative to data interpretation in basic and clinical research, to the stratification of clinical trials or to the monitoring of drug effects on the target pathway, the mechanistic insight gained here provides a foundation for the rational development of signalling prototypes that target the β-adrenoceptor system.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
13
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........b8ac30f2b1d03ee5b23e19f3c7cbd6df
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-34765-w