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Functional Selectivity of a Biased Cannabinoid-1 Receptor (CB(1)R) Antagonist

[Image: see text] Seven-transmembrane receptors signal via G-protein- and β-arrestin-dependent pathways. We describe a peripheral CB(1)R antagonist (MRI-1891) highly biased toward inhibiting CB(1)R-induced β-arrestin-2 (βArr2) recruitment over G-protein activation. In obese wild-type and βArr2-knock...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Liu, Ziyi, Iyer, Malliga R., Godlewski, Grzegorz, Jourdan, Tony, Liu, Jie, Coffey, Nathan J., Zawatsky, Charles N., Puhl, Henry L., Wess, Jürgen, Meister, Jaroslawna, Liow, Jeih-San, Innis, Robert B., Hassan, Sergio A., Lee, Yong Sok, Kunos, George, Cinar, Resat
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2021
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8204328/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34151207
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsptsci.1c00048
Descripción
Sumario:[Image: see text] Seven-transmembrane receptors signal via G-protein- and β-arrestin-dependent pathways. We describe a peripheral CB(1)R antagonist (MRI-1891) highly biased toward inhibiting CB(1)R-induced β-arrestin-2 (βArr2) recruitment over G-protein activation. In obese wild-type and βArr2-knockout (KO) mice, MRI-1891 treatment reduces food intake and body weight without eliciting anxiety even at a high dose causing partial brain CB(1)R occupancy. By contrast, the unbiased global CB(1)R antagonist rimonabant elicits anxiety in both strains, indicating no βArr2 involvement. Interestingly, obesity-induced muscle insulin resistance is improved by MRI-1891 in wild-type but not in βArr2-KO mice. In C2C12 myoblasts, CB(1)R activation suppresses insulin-induced akt-2 phosphorylation, preventable by MRI-1891, βArr2 knockdown or overexpression of CB(1)R-interacting protein. MRI-1891, but not rimonabant, interacts with nonpolar residues on the N-terminal loop, including F108, and on transmembrane helix-1, including S123, a combination that facilitates βArr2 bias. Thus, CB(1)R promotes muscle insulin resistance via βArr2 signaling, selectively mitigated by a biased CB(1)R antagonist at reduced risk of central nervous system (CNS) side effects.