SR17018 stimulates atypical µ-opioid receptor phosphorylation and
dephosphorylation
Abstract
Abstract Background and Purpose Opioid-associated overdoses and deaths
due to respiratory depression are a major public health problem in the
US and other western countries. During the last decade much research
effort has been directed towards the development of G protein-biased
µ-opioid receptor (MOP) agonists as a possible means to circumvent this
problem. The bias hypothesis proposes that G protein signalling mediates
analgesia whereas ß-arrestin signalling mediates respiratory depression.
SR-17018 was initially reported as a highly biased µ-opioid with an
extremely wide therapeutic window. Later it was shown that SR-17018 can
also reverse morphine tolerance and prevent withdrawal by a hitherto
unknown mechanism of action. Experimental Approach Here, we examined the
temporal dynamics of SR-17018-induced MOP phosphorylation and
dephosphorylation. Key Results Exposure of MOP to saturating
concentrations of SR-17018 for extended periods of time stimulated a MOP
phosphorylation pattern that was indistinguishable from that induced by
the full agonist DAMGO. Unlike DAMGO-induced MOP phosphorylation, which
is reversible within minutes after agonist washout, SR-17018-induced MOP
phosphorylation persisted for hours under otherwise identical
conditions. Such a delayed MOP dephosphorylation kinetics was also found
for the partial agonist buprenorphine. However unlike our observations
for buprenorphine, SR-17018-induced MOP phosphorylation was fully
reversible when naloxone was included in the washout solution.
Conclusion and Implications SR-17018 exhibits a qualitative and temporal
MOP phosphorylation profile that is strikingly different from any other
known biased, partial or full MOP agonist. We conclude that detailed
phosphorylation analysis may provide novel insights into previously
unappreciated pharmacological properties of newly synthesized MOP
ligands.