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Evidence That the Proposed Novel Human 'Neurokinin-4' Receptor Is Pharmacologically Similar to the Human Neurokinin-3 Receptor but Is Not of Human Origin

Authors :
Henry M. Sarau
Douglas W. P. Hay
Peter T. Buckley
James J. Foley
Jonathan A. Lee
Dulcie B. Schmidt
Da Y. Wang
Jeffrey L. Mooney
Giuseppe Giardina
Source :
Molecular Pharmacology. 58:552-559
Publication Year :
2000
Publisher :
American Society for Pharmacology & Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET), 2000.

Abstract

There have been proposals that the tachykinin receptor classification should be extended to include a novel receptor, the "neurokinin-4" receptor (NK-4R), which has a close homology with the human NK-3 receptor (hNK-3R). We compared the pharmacological and molecular biological characteristics of the hNK-3R and NK-4R. Binding experiments, with (125)I-[MePhe(7)]-NKB binding to HEK 293 cell membranes transiently expressing the hNK-3R (HEK 293-hNK-3R) or NK-4R (HEK 293-NK-4R), and functional studies (Ca(2+) mobilization in the same cells) revealed a similar profile of sensitivity to tachykinin agonists and antagonists for both receptors; i.e., in binding studies with the hNK-3R, MePhe(7)-NKB > NKB > senktide >> NKA = Substance P; with the NK-4R, MePhe(7)-NKB > NKB = senktide >> Substance P = NKA; and with antagonists, SB 223412 = SR 142801 > SB 222200 >> SR 48968 >> CP 99994 for both hNK-3R and NK-4R. Thus, the pharmacology of the two receptors was nearly identical. However, attempts to isolate or identify the NK-4R gene by using various molecular biological techniques were unsuccessful. Procedures, including nested polymerase chain reaction studies, that used products with restriction endonuclease sites specific for either hNK-3R or NK-4R, failed to demonstrate the presence of NK-4R in genomic DNA from human, monkey, mouse, rat, hamster, or guinea pig, and in cDNA libraries from human lung, brain, or heart, whereas the hNK-3R was detectable in the latter libraries. In view of the failure to demonstrate the presence of the putative NK-4R it is thought to be premature to extend the current tachykinin receptor classification.

Details

ISSN :
15210111 and 0026895X
Volume :
58
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Pharmacology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....13c9018eb901de94ea0ac3682cd2046b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1124/mol.58.3.552