A series of compounds formerly identified by high-throughput screening was studied for their ability to serve as pharmacoperones for the vasopressin type 2 receptor (V2R) mutant L83Q, which is known to cause nephrogenic diabetes insipidus (NDI). Three compounds were particularly effective in rerouting the mutant receptor in a concentration-dependent manner, were neither agonists nor antagonists, and displayed low cellular toxicity. Compound 1 was most effective and can be used as a molecular probe for future studies of how small molecules may affect NDI caused by mutant V2R. These compounds, however, failed to rescue the V2R Y128S mutant, indicating that the compounds described may not work in the rescue of all known mutants of V2R. Taken collectively, the present studies have now identified a promising lead compound that could function as a pharmacoperone to correct the trafficking defect of the NDI-associated mutant V2R L83Q and thus has the therapeutic potential for the treatment of NDI.
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Cover Image
In this issue of the Biochemical Journal, Thomas et al. report on the interaction between AMPK and one of its target proteins TBC1D1. The research shows that the association is AMPK-isoform-specific and that it is disrupted by a mutation linked to obesity. The cover image, taken from the article, shows Western blot analysis of the phosphorylation of transiently expressed GFP-TBC1D1 as well as AMPK and ACC from Flp-In HEK293 cells that stably express FLAG-AMPK-α1 or FLAG-AMPK-α2. For further details, see pages 2969–2983.
Chemical validation and optimization of pharmacoperones targeting vasopressin type 2 receptor mutant
Jo Ann Janovick, Timothy P. Spicer, Thomas D. Bannister, Emery Smith, Vadivel Ganapathy, Louis Scampavia; Chemical validation and optimization of pharmacoperones targeting vasopressin type 2 receptor mutant. Biochem J 28 September 2018; 475 (18): 2941–2953. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/BCJ20180065
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