Journal of Pharmacological Sciences (Jun 2019)

Possible biased analgesic of hydromorphone through the G protein-over β-arrestin-mediated pathway: cAMP, CellKey™, and receptor internalization analyses

  • Sei Manabe,
  • Kanako Miyano,
  • Yuriko Fujii,
  • Kaori Ohshima,
  • Yuki Yoshida,
  • Miki Nonaka,
  • Miaki Uzu,
  • Yoshikazu Matsuoka,
  • Tetsufumi Sato,
  • Yasuhito Uezono,
  • Hiroshi Morimatsu

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 140, no. 2
pp. 171 – 177

Abstract

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Morphine, fentanyl, and oxycodone are widely used as analgesics, and recently hydromorphone has been approved in Japan. Although all of these are selective for μ-opioid receptors (MORs) and have similar structures, their analgesic potencies and adverse effects (AEs) are diverse. Recent molecular analyses of MOR signaling revealed that the G protein-mediated signaling pathway causes analgesic effects and the β-arrestin-mediated signaling pathway is responsible for AEs. We used several cell-based analyses that selectively measure cellular responses activated by either G protein- or β-arrestin-mediated pathways. GloSensor™ cAMP, CellKey™, and receptor internalization assays were performed with four different types of cells stably expressing differentially labelled MOR. EC50 values measured by cAMP and CellKey™ assays had potencies in the order fentanyl ≤ hydromorphone < morphine ≤ oxycodone, all also exhibiting full agonist responses. However, in the internalization assay, only fentanyl elicited a full agonist response. Hydromorphone had the strongest potency next to fentanyl; however, contribution of the β-arrestin-mediated pathway was small, suggesting that its effect could be biased toward the G protein-mediated pathway. Based on these properties, hydromorphone could be chosen as an effective analgesic. Keywords: μ-opioid receptor, Hydromorphone, Biased agonist, β-arrestin, G protein