Elucidating the key signal transduction pathways essential for both antipsychotic efficacy and side-effect profiles is essential for developing safer and more effective therapies. Recent work has highlighted noncanonical modes of dopamine D 2 receptor (D 2R) signaling via β-arrestins as being important for the therapeutic actions of both antipsychotic and antimanic agents. We thus sought to create unique D 2R agonists that display signaling bias via β-arrestinergic signaling. Through a robust diversity-oriented modification of the scaffold represented by aripiprazole (1), we discovered UNC9975 (2), UNC0006 (3), and UNC9994 (4) as unprecedented β-arrestin-biased D 2R ligands. These compounds also represent unprecedented β-arrestin-biased ligands for a G i-coupled G protein-coupled receptor (GPCR). Significantly, UNC9975, UNC0006, and UNC9994 are simultaneously antagonists of G i-regulated cAMP production and partial agonists for D 2R/β-arrestin-2 interactions. Importantly, UNC9975 displayed potent antipsychotic-like activity without inducing motoric side effects in inbred C57BL/6 mice in vivo. Genetic deletion of β-arrestin-2 simultaneously attenuated the antipsychotic actions of UNC9975 and transformed it into a typical antipsychotic drug with a high propensity to induce catalepsy. Similarly, the antipsychotic-like activity displayed by UNC9994, an extremely β-arrestin-biased D 2R agonist, in wild-type mice was completely abolished in β-arrestin-2 knockout mice. Taken together, our results suggest that β-arrestin signaling and recruitment can be simultaneously a significant contributor to antipsychotic efficacy and protective against motoric side effects. These functionally selective, β-arrestin-biased D 2R ligands represent valuable chemical probes for further investigations of D 2R signaling in health and disease.
CITATION STYLE
Allen, J. A., Yost, J. M., Setola, V., Chen, X., Sassano, M. F., Chen, M., … Jin, J. (2011). Discovery of β-arrestin-biased dopamine D 2 ligands for probing signal transduction pathways essential for antipsychotic efficacy. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 108(45), 18488–18493. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1104807108
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