4.7 Article

The actions of benzophenanthridine alkaloids, piperonyl butoxide and (S)-methoprene at the G-protein coupled cannabinoid CB1 receptor in vitro

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHARMACOLOGY
Volume 654, Issue 1, Pages 26-32

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.ejphar.2010.11.033

Keywords

CB1 receptor; Sanguinarine; Chelerythrine; Piperonyl butoxide; Methoprene; Mouse brain

Funding

  1. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)

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This investigation focused primarily on the interaction of two benzophenanthridine alkaloids (chelerythrine and sanguinarine), piperonyl butoxide and (S)-methoprene with G-protein-coupled cannabinoid CB1 receptors of mouse brain in vitro. Chelerythrine and sanguinarine inhibited the binding of the CB1 receptor agonist [H-3]CP-55940 to mouse whole brain membranes at low micromolar concentrations (IC(50)s: chelerythrine 2.20 mu M; sanguinarine 1.10 mu M). The structurally related isoquinoline alkaloids (berberine and papaverine) and the phthalide isoquinoline ((-)-beta-hydrastine) were either inactive or considerably below IC50 at 30 mu M. Chelerythrine and sanguinarine antagonized CP-55940-stimulated binding of [S-35] GTP gamma S to the G-protein (IC(50)s: chelerythrine 2.09 mu M; sanguinarine 1.22 mu M). In contrast to AM251, both compounds strongly inhibited basal binding of [S-35]GTP gamma S (IC(50)s: chelerythrine 10.06 mu M; sanguinarine 5.19 mu M). Piperonyl butoxide and S-methoprene inhibited the binding of [H-3]CP-55940 (IC(50)s: piperonyl butoxide 8.2 mu M; methoprene 16.4 mu M), and also inhibited agonist-stimulated (but not basal) binding of [S-35]GTP gamma S to brain membranes (IC(50)s: piperonyl butoxide 22.5 mu M: (S)-methoprene 19.31 mu M). PMSF did not modify the inhibitory effect of (S)-methoprene on [H-3]CP-55940 binding. Our data suggest that chelerythrine and sanguinarine are effacacious antagonists of G-protein-coupled CB1 receptors. They exhibit lower potencies compared to many conventional CB1 receptor blockers but act differently to AM251. Reverse modulation of CB, receptor agonist binding resulting from benzophenanthridines engaging with the G-protein component may explain this difference. Piperonyl butoxide and (S)-methoprene are effacacious, low potency, neutral antagonists of CB1 receptors. Certain of the study compounds may represent useful starting structures for development of novel/more potent G-protein-coupled CB1 receptor blocking drugs. (C) 2010 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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