Small synthetic ligands of the cholecystokinin-B/gastrin receptor can mimic the function of endogenous peptide hormones.
M Beinborn, C Chen, L DeMeo, E W McBride, A S Kopin
Index: Yale J. Biol. Med. 71(3-4) , 337-46, (1998)
Full Text: HTML
Abstract
The gastric cholecystokinin-B/gastrin receptor (CCK-BR) is a key regulator of enterochromaffin-like cell function and proliferation. Over the last decade, a number of small non-peptide CCK-BR "antagonists" have been discovered. Here, we demonstrate that some of these non-peptide ligands in fact possess significant ability to activate the human CCK-BR, and are, therefore, more properly categorized as partial agonists. When tested in COS-7 cells transiently expressing the recombinant human CCK-BR, saturating concentrations of the small "peptoid" ligands PD 135,158 and PD 136,450 stimulated inositol phosphate formation to 23 and 43 percent, respectively, of the maximum response induced by a considerably larger endogenous peptide agonist, cholecystokinin octapeptide. In contrast, the benzodiazepine-derived CCK-BR ligand, YM022, acted as a "true" high-affinity antagonist of cholecystokinin-induced inositol phosphate formation (pA2 = 9.69). Consistent with recent findings in animal experiments, our data reveal that small synthetic ligands have the potential to function as either CCK-BR agonists or antagonists. These dual properties of synthetic molecules must be considered when evaluating candidate drugs for human disease.
Related Compounds
Related Articles:
Motilin Stimulates Gastric Acid Secretion in Coordination with Ghrelin in Suncus murinus.
2015-01-01
[PLoS ONE 10 , e0131554, (2015)]
2010-01-01
[J. Mol. Signal. 5 , 9, (2010)]
2009-11-01
[J. Lipid Res. 50(11) , 2203-11, (2009)]
2010-02-01
[Alcohol. Clin. Exp. Res. 34 Suppl 1 , S14-7, (2010)]
2000-12-01
[Neurogastroenterol. Motil. 12(6) , 539-46, (2000)]