4.6 Article

Nalfurafine is a G-protein biased agonist having significantly greater bias at the human than rodent form of the kappa opioid receptor

Journal

CELLULAR SIGNALLING
Volume 32, Issue -, Pages 59-65

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.cellsig.2017.01.016

Keywords

Kappa opioid receptor; Biased signaling; p38 MAPK; Dysphoria

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Funding

  1. National Institute on Drug Abuse [PO1-DA035764, T32-DA07278]

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Nalfurafine is a moderately selective kappa opioid receptor (KOR) analgesic with low incidence of dysphoric side effects in clinical development for the treatment of uremic pruritis. The basis for its reduced dysphoric effect compared to other KOR agonists is not clear, but prior studies suggest that the aversive properties of KOR agonists require p38 alpha MAPK activation through an arrestin-dependent mechanism. To determine whether nalfurafine is a functionally selective KOR agonist, we measured its potency to activate the G protein-dependent early phase of Extracellular Signal-Regulated Kinase (ERK1/2) phosphorylation and the arrestin-dependent late phase of p38 MAPK signaling. Nalfurafine was approximately 250 fold more potent for ERK1/2 activation as compared to p38 MAPK activation in human KOR (hKOR) expressing HEK293 cells, and approximately 20 fold more potent for ERK1/2 activation than p38 activation in rodent KOR (rKOR) expressing HEK293 cells. The 10-fold greater G-bias at the hKOR than rKOR was unexpected, however the G protein biased effect of nalfurafine is consistent with its reduced dysphoric effects in human and rodent models. Although nalfurafine is reported to have low receptor selectivity in radioligand binding assays, its antinociceptive effect was blocked by the selective KOR antagonist norbinaltorphimine. Nalfurafine pretreatment also resulted in a KOR-dependent and mu opioid receptor independent reduction in scratching induced by 5'-GNTI. These findings suggest that nalfurafine is a functionally selective KOR agonist and that KOR agonists able to selectively activate G protein signaling without activating p38 alpha MAPK may have therapeutic potential as non-dysphoric antipruritic analgesics. (C) 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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