AI Article Synopsis

  • The alpha7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR) plays a significant role in cognitive functions in the central nervous system and is a target for improving cognitive deficits using selective agonists and positive allosteric modulators.
  • Recent discoveries of novel compounds like NS-1738 and PNU-120596 highlight that these molecules interact with different sites on the alpha7 receptor, exhibiting unique modulation profiles.
  • Research employing chimeric receptors reveals that specific structural elements of the alpha7 receptor are crucial for its positive allosteric modulation, indicating diverse mechanisms among allosteric modulators that could lead to advanced therapeutic strategies.

Article Abstract

The alpha7 nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (nAChR), a homopentameric, rapidly activating and desensitizing ligand-gated ion channel with relatively high degree of calcium permeability, is expressed in the mammalian central nervous system, including regions associated with cognitive processing. Selective agonists targeting the alpha7 nAChR have shown efficacy in animal models of cognitive dysfunction. Use of positive allosteric modulators selective for the alpha7 receptor is another strategy that is envisaged in the design of active compounds aiming at improving attention and cognitive dysfunction. The recent discovery of novel positive allosteric modulators such as 1-(5-chloro-2-hydroxyphenyl)-3-(2-chloro-5-trifluoromethylphenyl)urea (NS-1738) and 1-(5-chloro-2,4-dimethoxyphenyl)-3-(5-methylisoxazol-3-yl)urea (PNU-120596) that are selective for the alpha7 nAChRs but display significant phenotypic differences in their profile of allosteric modulation, suggests that these molecules may act at different sites on the receptor. Taking advantage of the possibility to obtain functional receptors by the fusion of proteins domains from the alpha7 and the 5-HT(3) receptor, we examined the structural determinants required for positive allosteric modulation. This strategy revealed that the extracellular N-terminal domain of alpha7 plays a critical role in allosteric modulation by NS-1738. In addition, alpha7-5HT(3) chimeras harboring the M2-M3 segment showed that spontaneous activity in response to NS-1738, which confirmed the critical contribution of this small extracellular segment in the receptor gating. In contrast to NS-1738, positive allosteric modulation by PNU-120596 could not be restored in the alpha7-5HT(3) chimeras but was selectively observed in the reverse 5HT(3)-alpha7 chimera. All together, these data illustrate the existence of distinct allosteric binding sites with specificity of different profiles of allosteric modulators and open new possibilities to investigate the alpha7 receptor function.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1124/mol.107.042820DOI Listing

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