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Pharmacodynamics of Monoamine Transporter Releasing Agents and Reuptake Inhibitors

Ligands of the human monoamine transporters encompass a wide range of both illicit and therapeutic drugs that act upon neural circuitry related to reward, motivation, and the processing of salient stimuli. The present study utilizes two methods for analyzing transporter substrates and inhibitors in order to characterize activity and assess potency. The first measures transient changes in intracellular calcium as a surrogate for transporter activity by harnessing the electrical coupling of monoamine transporters and L-type calcium channels. This is used to analyze novel chimera of the strong hDAT inhibitors methylphenidate and 𝛼-PPP in order to assess the contribution of specific moieties to potency. The observed reduction in potency suggests that methylphenidate may bind to the transporter in a manner distinct from 𝛼-PPP, as chimera would otherwise be expected to show similar activity to parent compounds. These results highlight the importance of 𝛼-carbon substituents and the relatively small contribution of beta-carbon groups to inhibitor potency at hDAT, while the lack of activity at hSERT suggests potency is not strongly influenced by beta-carbon or N-alkyl substituents. In order to further characterize drug-transporter interaction, a method was developed to analyze the kinetics of binding and unbinding using both known and novel hNET ligands, including a series of N-alkyl derivatives of 4-methylamphetamine. The study emphasizes the importance of both association and dissociation kinetics to affinity and sets up a methodological framework with two ways for determining Kd, with notable advantages over current models. The results indicate that lengthening the N-alkyl chain of 4-methylamphetamine leads to a decrease in potency and a shift in activity from substrate to blocker, with the results of N-propyl 4-methylamphetamine in particular indicating the potential existence of multiple low-affinity binding sites, each with distinct on and off kinetics. The implications of these results help elucidate the mechanism of action of transporter ligands and set up a framework for future studies that can more specifically classify the interaction between transporters and inhibitors or releasing agents.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:vcu.edu/oai:scholarscompass.vcu.edu:etd-6966
Date01 January 2019
CreatorsHolloway, Alexa
PublisherVCU Scholars Compass
Source SetsVirginia Commonwealth University
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typetext
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceTheses and Dissertations
Rights© The Author

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