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Journal of Pharmacology And Experimental Therapeutics Fast Forward
First published on January 9, 2008; DOI: 10.1124/jpet.107.131904


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Received for publication September 19, 2007.
Revised January 8, 2008.
Accepted for publication January 8, 2008.

Activation and Inhibition of Adenylyl Cyclase Isoforms by Forskolin Analogs

Cibele Pinto 1, Dan Papa 1, Melanie Hubner 2, Tung-Chung Mou 3, Gerald H. Lushington 1, Roland Seifert 2*

1 University of Kansas 2 University of Regensburg 3 University of Montana

* Address correspondence to: E-mail: roland.seifert{at}chemie.uni-regensburg.de

Abstract

Adenylyl cyclase (AC) isoforms 1-9 are differentially expressed in tissues and constitute an interesting drug target. ACs 1-8 are activated by the diterpene, forskolin (FS). Unfortunately, there is a paucity of AC isoform-selective activators. To develop such compounds, an understanding of the structure/activity relationships of diterpenes is necessary. Therefore, we examined the effects of FS and nine FS analogs on ACs 1, 2 and 5 expressed in Sf9 insect cells. Diterpenes showed the highest potencies at AC1 and the lowest potencies at AC2. We identified full agonists, partial agonists, antagonists and inverse agonists, i.e. diterpenes that reduced basal AC activity. Each AC isoform exhibited a distinct pharmacological profile. AC2 showed the highest basal activity of all AC isoforms and highest sensitivity to inverse agonistic effects of 1-deoxy-forskolin, 7-deacetyl-1,9-dideoxy-forskolin and, particularly, BODIPY-forskolin. In contrast, BODIPY-forskolin acted as partial agonist at the other ACs. 1-Deoxy-forskolin analogs were devoid of agonistic activity at ACs but antagonized the effects of FS in a mixed competitive/non-competitive manner. At purified catalytic AC subunits, BODIPY-forskolin acted as weak partial agonist/strong partial antagonist. Molecular modeling revealed that the BODIPY group rotates promiscuously outside of the FS-binding site. Collectively, ACs are not uniformly activated and inhibited by FS and FS analogs, demonstrating the feasibility to design isoform-selective FS analogs. The two-state- and multiple-state models, originally developed to conceptualize ligand effects at G-protein-coupled receptors, can be applied to ACs to explain certain experimental data.


Key words: Adenylyl cyclase, Forskolin, G-protein, Isoenzymes, Natural products, Structure-acticity relationships





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