4.6 Article

The orphan nuclear receptor Nurr1 is responsive to non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs

Journal

COMMUNICATIONS CHEMISTRY
Volume 3, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/s42004-020-0331-0

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Funding

  1. Aventis Foundation
  2. research funding program LOEWE of the State of Hessen, Research Center for Translational Medicine and Pharmacology TMP

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Nurr1 is a promising therapeutic target for neurodegenerative diseases, but mechanistic understand of its modulation is limited and Nurr1 modulators as tools are lacking. Here, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are shown to act as inverse Nurr1 agonists, and their interactions with the NR4A family are characterised. Nuclear receptor related 1 (Nurr1) is an orphan ligand-activated transcription factor and considered as neuroprotective transcriptional regulator with great potential as therapeutic target for neurodegenerative diseases. However, the collection of available Nurr1 modulators and mechanistic understanding of Nurr1 are limited. Here, we report the discovery of several structurally diverse non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs as inverse Nurr1 agonists demonstrating that Nurr1 activity can be regulated bidirectionally. As chemical tools, these ligands enable unraveling the co-regulatory network of Nurr1 and the mode of action distinguishing agonists from inverse agonists. In addition to its ability to dimerize, we observe an ability of Nurr1 to recruit several canonical nuclear receptor co-regulators in a ligand-dependent fashion. Distinct dimerization states and co-regulator interaction patterns arise as discriminating factors of Nurr1 agonists and inverse agonists. Our results contribute a valuable collection of Nurr1 modulators and relevant mechanistic insights for future Nurr1 target validation and drug discovery.

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