4.6 Article

Photoactivatable Agonist-Antagonist Pair as a Tool for Precise Spatiotemporal Control of Serotonin Receptor 2C Signaling

Journal

ACS CHEMICAL NEUROSCIENCE
Volume 14, Issue 19, Pages 3665-3673

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acschemneuro.3c00290

Keywords

photocaging; serotonin; GPCR; synapse; calcium signaling; 5-HT2C

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Orthogonal recreation of the signaling profile of a chemical synapse is a current challenge in neuroscience. In this study, photocaged compounds were used to recreate the rapid rise and fall in activation at a chemical synapse. By conjugating these compounds to a subtype-selective agonist and antagonist, the bioactive drugs could be released upon illumination with specific colors of light. The kinetics of photolysis and the control of intracellular calcium flux were characterized, allowing for greater spatiotemporal control of 5-HT2C modulation.
Orthogonal recreation of the signaling profile of a chemical synapse is a current challenge in neuroscience. This is due in part to the kinetics of synaptic signaling, where neurotransmitters are rapidly released and quickly cleared by active reuptake machinery. One strategy to produce a rapid rise in an orthogonally controlled signal is via photocaged compounds. In this work, photocaged compounds are employed to recreate both the rapid rise and equally rapid fall in activation at a chemical synapse. Specifically, a complementary pair of photocages based on BODIPY were conjugated to a 5-HT2C subtype-selective agonist, WAY-161503, and antagonist, N-desmethylclozapine, to generate caged versions of these drugs. These conjugates release the bioactive drug upon illumination with green light (agonist) or red light (antagonist). We report on the synthesis, characterization, and bioactivity testing of the conjugates against the 5-HT2C receptor. We then characterize the kinetics of photolysis quantitatively using HPLC and qualitatively in cell culture conditions stimulating live cells. The compounds are shown to be stable in the dark for 48 h at room temperature, yet photolyze rapidly when irradiated with visible light. In live cells expressing the 5-HT2C receptor, precise spatiotemporal control of the degree and length of calcium signaling is demonstrated. By loading both compounds in tandem and leveraging spectral multiplexing as a noninvasive method to control local small-molecule drug availability, we can reproducibly initiate and suppress intracellular calcium flux on a timescale not possible by traditional methods of drug dosing. These tools enable a greater spatiotemporal control of 5-HT2C modulation and will allow for more detailed studies of the receptors' signaling, interactions with other proteins, and native physiology.

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