Abstract

In 2005, the first evidence of an allosteric binding site at the CB1R was provided by the identification of three indoles of the company Organon that were allosteric enhancers of agonist binding affinity and, functionally, allosteric inhibitors of agonist activity. Since then, structure–activity relationships of indoles as CB1R modulators have been reported. Targeting the allosteric site on CB1R, new families structurally based on urea and on 3-phenyltropane analogs of cocaine have been discovered as CB1R-negative allosteric modulators (NAMs), respectively, by Prosidion and by the Research Triangle Park. Endogenous allosteric ligands of different nature have been identified more recently. Thus, the therapeutic neuroprotection application of lipoxin A4, an arachidonic acid derivative, as an allosteric enhancer of CB1R activity has been confirmed in vivo. It was also the case of the steroid hormone, pregnenolone, whose negative allosteric effects on Δ9-tetrahydrocannabinol (Δ9-THC) were reproduced in vivo in a behavioral tetrad model and in food intake and memory impairment assays. Curiously, the peroxisome proliferator-activated receptor-γ agonist fenofibrate or polypeptides such as pepcan-12 have been shown to act on the endocannabinoid system through CB1R allosteric modulation. The mechanistic bases of the effects of the phytocannabinoid cannabidiol (CBD) are still not fully explained. However, there is evidence that CBD behaves as an NAM of Δ9-THC- and 2-AG. Allosteric modulation at CB1R offers new opportunities for therapeutic applications. Therefore, further understanding of the chemical features required for allosteric modulation as well as their orthosteric probe dependence may broaden novel approaches for fine-tuning the signaling pathways of the CB1R.

Highlights

  • One traditional way of designing new drugs is the socalled one target–one disease approach

  • Research has shifted to compounds that can interact with a different region of the receptor, termed the allosteric site, since this approach may result in pharmacological advantages such as higher specificity and reduced side effects

  • Following discovery of Org27569, structure–activity relationship (SAR) studies were reported by various research groups confirming that indole-2-carboxamide was a good scaffold for developing allosteric modulators for CB1R

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Summary

Introduction

One traditional way of designing new drugs is the socalled one target–one disease approach. The effect of Org27569 as a NAM has been confirmed in a neuronal model of endocannabinoid synaptic transmission.[11] when tested in vivo, Org27569 lacked efficacy in modulating the action of orthosteric cannabinoids.[12] controversial pharmacological data led to a very recent study in which the allosteric effects of Org27569 at CB1R have been revealed to be pathway specific and time dependent, suggesting a more complex process than initially proposed.[13]

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