Journal of Pharmacological Sciences (Jan 2022)

Effects of flurbiprofen on the functional regulation of serotonin transporter and its misfolded mutant

  • Haruki Hirakawa,
  • Kei Taguchi,
  • Seiya Murakawa,
  • Masaya Asano,
  • Soma Noguchi,
  • Satoshi Kikkawa,
  • Kana Harada,
  • Naoko Adachi,
  • Takehiko Ueyama,
  • Izumi Hide,
  • Shigeru Tanaka,
  • Norio Sakai

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 148, no. 1
pp. 187 – 195

Abstract

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Flurbiprofen, a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, reportedly exhibits chemical chaperone activity. Herein, we investigated the role of flurbiprofen in regulating serotonin transporter (SERT) function via membrane trafficking. We used COS-7 cells transiently expressing wild-type (WT) SERT or a C-terminus-deleted mutant of SERT (SERTΔCT), a misfolded protein. Flurbiprofen treatment reduced the expression of immaturely glycosylated SERT and enhanced the expression of maturely glycosylated SERT. In addition, we observed increased serotonin uptake in SERT-expressing cells. These results suggest that flurbiprofen modulates SERT function by promoting membrane trafficking. In SERTΔCT-expressing cells, flurbiprofen reduced the protein expression and uptake activity of SERTΔCT. Furthermore, flurbiprofen inhibited the formation of SERTΔCT aggregates. Studies using flurbiprofen enantiomers suggested that these effects of flurbiprofen on SERT were not mediated via cyclooxygenase inhibition. The levels of GRP78/BiP, an endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress marker, were assessed to elucidate whether flurbiprofen can ameliorate SERTΔCT-induced ER stress. Interestingly, flurbiprofen induced GRP78/BiP expression only under ER stress conditions and not under steady-state conditions. In HRD1 E3 ubiquitin ligase knockdown cells, flurbiprofen affected the ER-associated degradation system. Collectively, the findings suggest that flurbiprofen may function as an inducer of molecular chaperones, in addition to functioning as a chemical chaperone.

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