Structural and Molecular Insight into Piperazine and Piperidine Derivatives as Histamine H3 and Sigma‑1 Receptor Antagonists with Promising Antinociceptive Properties
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
American Chemical Society
Materia
Histamine H3 receptor Sigma-1 receptor Sigma-2 receptor Piperazine derivatives Piperidine derivatives Dual targeting compounds Molecular docking Dynamics Functional characterization
Date
2021-12-15Referencia bibliográfica
ACS Chem. Neurosci. 2022, 13, 1, 1–15. [https://doi.org/10.1021/acschemneuro.1c00435]
Sponsorship
National Science Centre, Poland 2020/36/C/NZ7/00284; ERNEST COST Action 18133; Foundation of Polish Science within the START scholarship graduate school "Receptor Dynamics" of the Elite Network of Bavaria (ENB); Training University Lecturers program (FPU) of the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness (MINECO); Spanish State Research Agency under the auspices of MINECO PID2019-108691RB-I00; University of Catania, PIA.CE.RI; project CARETO 57722172136Abstract
In an attempt to extend recent studies showing that
some clinically evaluated histamine H3 receptor (H3R) antagonists
possess nanomolar affinity at sigma-1 receptors (σ1R), we selected
20 representative structures among our previously reported H3R
ligands to investigate their affinity at σRs. Most of the tested
compounds interact with both sigma receptors to different degrees.
However, only six of them showed higher affinity toward σ1R than
σ2R with the highest binding preference to σ1R for compounds 5,
11, and 12. Moreover, all these ligands share a common structural
feature: the piperidine moiety as the fundamental part of the
molecule. It is most likely a critical structural element for dual H3/σ1 receptor activity as can be seen by comparing the data for
compounds 4 and 5 (hH3R Ki = 3.17 and 7.70 nM, σ1R Ki = 1531 and 3.64 nM, respectively), where piperidine is replaced by
piperazine. We identified the putative protein−ligand interactions responsible for their high affinity using molecular modeling
techniques and selected compounds 5 and 11 as lead structures for further evaluation. Interestingly, both ligands turned out to be
high-affinity histamine H3 and σ1 receptor antagonists with negligible affinity at the other histamine receptor subtypes and promising
antinociceptive activity in vivo. Considering that many literature data clearly indicate high preclinical efficacy of individual selective
σ1 or H3R ligands in various pain models, our research might be a breakthrough in the search for novel, dual-acting compounds that
can improve existing pain therapies. Determining whether such ligands are more effective than single-selective drugs will be the
subject of our future studies.