Evaluation of allosteric N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor modulation by GluN2A-selective antagonists using pharmacological equilibrium modeling

James S. Lotti, Jaron Jones, Jill C. Farnsworth, Feng Yi, Fabao Zhao, Frank S. Menniti, Robert A. Volkmann, Rasmus P. Clausen, Kasper B. Hansen

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA)-type ionotropic glutamate receptors are critically involved in excitatory neurotransmission and their dysfunction is implicated in many brain disorders. Allosteric modulators with selectivity for specific NMDA receptor subtypes are therefore attractive as therapeutic agents, and sustained drug discovery efforts have resulted in a wide range of new allosteric modulators. However, evaluation of allosteric NMDA receptor modulators is limited by the lack of operational ligand-receptor models to describe modulator binding dissociation constants (KB) and effects on agonist binding affinity (α) and efficacy (β). Here, we describe a pharmacological equilibrium model that encapsulates activation and modulation of NMDA receptors, and we apply this model to afford deeper understanding of GluN2A-selective negative allosteric modulators, TCN-201, MPX-004, and MPX-007. We exploit slow negative allosteric modulator unbinding to examine receptors at hemi-equilibrium when fully occupied by agonists and modulators to demonstrate that TCN-201 display weaker binding and negative modulation of glycine binding affinity (KB = 42 nM, α = 0.0032) compared with MPX-004 (KB = 9.3 nM, α = 0.0018) and MPX-007 (KB = 1.1 nM, α = 0.00053). MPX-004 increases agonist efficacy (β = 1.19), whereas TCN-201 (β = 0.76) and MPX-007 (β = 0.82) reduce agonist efficacy. These values describing allosteric modulation of diheteromeric GluN1/2A receptors with 2 modulator binding sites are unchanged in triheteromeric GluN1/2A/2B receptors with a single binding site. This evaluation of NMDA receptor modulation reveals differences between ligand analogs that shape their utility as pharmacological tool compounds and facilitates the design of new modulators with therapeutic potential. Significance Statement: Detailed understanding of allosteric N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor modulation requires pharmacological methods to quantify modulator binding affinity and the strengths of modulation of agonist binding and efficacy. We describe a generic ligand-receptor model for allosteric NMDA receptor modulation and use this model for the characterization of GluN2A-selective negative allosteric modulators. The model enables quantitative evaluation of a broad range of NMDA receptor modulators and provides opportunities to optimize these modulators by embellishing the interpretation of their structure-activity relationships.

Original languageEnglish
Article number100004
JournalMolecular Pharmacology
Volume107
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Jan 2025

Keywords

  • Allosteric modulation
  • Drug-receptor theory
  • Electrophysiology
  • Ionotropic glutamate receptor
  • Ligand-gated ion channel
  • Noncompetitive antagonism
  • Allosteric Regulation/drug effects
  • Hydrazines
  • Receptors, N-Methyl-D-Aspartate/metabolism
  • Humans
  • Xenopus laevis
  • Animals
  • Protein Binding
  • Benzenesulfonamides
  • Ligands

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