Abstract

Aimsd-deprenyl is a useful positron emission tomography tracer for visualization of inflammatory processes. Studies with [11C]-d-deprenyl showed robust uptake in peripheral painful sites of patients with rheumatoid arthritis or chronic whiplash injury. The mechanism of preferential d-deprenyl uptake is not yet known, but the existence of a specific binding site was proposed. Thus, in the present study, we sought to identify the binding site for d-deprenyl and verify the hypothesis about the possibility of monoamine oxidase enzymes as major targets for this molecule. Main methodsA high-throughput analysis of d-deprenyl activity towards 165G-protein coupled receptors and 84 enzyme targets was performed. Additionally, binding studies were used to verify the competition of [3H]d-deprenyl with ligands specific for targets identified in the high-throughput screen. Key findingsOur high-throughput investigation identified monoamine oxidase-B, monoamine oxidase-A and angiotensin converting enzyme as potential targets for d-deprenyl. Further competitive [3H]d-deprenyl binding studies with specific inhibitors identified monoamine oxidase-B as the major binding site. No evident high-affinity hits were identified among G-protein coupled receptors. SignificanceOur study was the first to utilize a high-throughput screening approach to identify putative d-deprenyl targets. It verified 249 candidate proteins and confirmed the role of monoamine oxidase - B in d-deprenyl binding. Our results add knowledge about the possible mechanism of d-deprenyl binding, which might aid in explaining the increased uptake of this compound in peripheral inflammation. Monoamine oxidase-B will be further investigated in future studies utilizing human inflamed synovium.

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