New tools for acute spatiotemporal control of GPCR signalling in vivo

Lead Research Organisation: University of Bath
Department Name: Pharmacy and Pharmacology

Abstract

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Technical Summary

We hypothesise that the high attrition rate in GPCR drug discovery reflects our limited understanding of how GPCR signalling controls physiological effects. This is especially relevant for receptors that have complex patterns of expression throughout the body and for the exploitation of biased agonism. Within this context, our aim is to develop two synergistic and complementary approaches to interrogate the physiological consequences of GPCR signalling in discrete cellular populations using the Mu opioid receptor as a model. Specifically, these approaches are:
1. A MOR DART-antagonist to understand the role of MOR signalling in distinct neuronal populations. The anatomical distribution of MORs is complex. Efforts to understand the physiological role of MORs in distinct neuronal populations has been hampered by the lack of tools with which to do so. In this regard, the use of Drugs Acutely Restricted by a Tether (DARTs) can address this knowledge gap by localising drug action to a specific cell population. We will develop a DART MOR antagonist and target it to neurons of the pre-Bötzinger complex. We hypothesise that this blockade will reduce morphine-induced respiratory depression but not its antinociceptive effect.
2. A strategy for cell selective and acute inhibition of G proteins in vivo. Over the last decade, considerable efforts have been directed towards the development of G protein biased ligands as safer opioid analgesics. These studies have highlighted our limited understanding of how different signalling pathways might dictate opioid responses. Work to date, using genetic knockdown models, has focused on the role of arrestin signalling only. The role of G proteins has been indirectly inferred from these studies. We have developed an approach that allows us to interrogate G protein signalling in an acute and cell specific manner. We will use it to interrogate the role of MOR G protein signalling in the pre-Bötzinger complex to control respiration.

Planned Impact

The basic fundamental research in this project will have relevance for basic scientists and industrial researchers and eventually for the general public. The success of the proposed research programme will have direct benefits for our collaborators as well as academic GPCR pharmacologists, neuroscientists, physiologists and drug discovery researchers. The longer-term benefits of the work have the potential to spread out more widely to companies in the pharmaceutical sector and to society at large.

1. Short term direct impact.
1.1 The collaborations established and consolidated with this programme between the University of Nottingham (JRL and MC), the University of Bath (CPB), the National Institute of Drug Addiction (AHN) and Columbia University (JAJ) will benefit from knowledge exchange throughout the project which will provide state-of-the-art methods in the control GPCR signalling in defined neuronal populations that are relevant to their research in aspects of opioid neuropharmacology (JRL, MC and CPB), addiction (AHN) and neuropsychiatry (JAJ).

1.2. GPCR pharmacologists, neuroscientists, physiologists and drug discovery researchers. The underpinning knowledge of GPCR biology and signalling can be used by the GPCR research community at wide. The results from this project will have immediate impact for researchers in the opioid field. Our novel MOR DARTs approach will allow researchers to deconvolute the complexities of opioid receptor signalling in distinct cellular populations. These studies will pave the way for future more comprehensive studies aimed at unlocking the complex role of MOR in distinct physiological roles such as pain sensation, respiration, gut motility, reward and emotion. Our work will provide an invaluable tool for the future study of MOR neurocircuitry. The broad applicability of our methods to other GPCR targets will enable similar mechanistic insights for other GPCRs in areas of high clinical need.

1.3 Junior researchers (the PDRAs) will benefit from training during the project in cutting-edge methods for the manipulation of GPCR signalling in vivo and in vitro. This will build research capacity and provide researchers for the future equipped with the relevant knowledge and expertise for roles in academia, industry, or policy.

2. Longer term indirect impact.
2.1 Pharmaceutical companies. Humans have around 800 GPCRs and it is thought that 400 have the potential to be targeted therapeutically. Fully understanding biased agonism of GPCRs may enable the development of novel drugs with greater tissue specificity and reduced side effects. Our research will also refine experimental design in biased agonism drug discovery, providing major improvements within the principles of the 3Rs and reducing the risk of failure of drugs at early pre-clinical stages. Together, our approaches will contribute to reducing the attrition rate associated with GPCR drug discovery and development.

2.2 Ensuring UK leadership in GPCR biology. The training of junior researchers and planned dissemination and outreach activities will ensure that awareness of the project is spread to the widest possible audience, both nationally and internationally. The training gained during the project will accelerate the career development and trajectory of the PDRAs, putting them on track to apply for independent fellowships so that they can lead their own groups to build capacity.

2.3 Benefits for quality of life and public health: The general public will benefit in the long term through improved knowledge of GPCR drug action and improved medicines. For example, pain has a significant economic and social impact whilst also reducing quality of life. The generation of novel analgesics will improve health and wellbeing whilst also reducing economic burden from sick leave.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description Collaboration with University of Nottingham 
Organisation University of Nottingham
Country United Kingdom 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Sharing ideas. Complementary techniques.
Collaborator Contribution Sharing ideas. Complementary techniques.
Impact none as yet
Start Year 2020