BJP Concise Guide 2015 16 GPCR
BJP Concise Guide 2015 16 GPCR
BJP Concise Guide 2015 16 GPCR
Abstract
The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16 provides concise overviews of the key properties of over 1750 human drug targets with their pharmacology, plus links to an open access knowledgebase
of drug targets and their ligands (www.guidetopharmacology.org), which provides more detailed views of target and ligand properties. The full contents can be found at http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/
10.1111/bph.13348/full. G protein-coupled receptors are one of the eight major pharmacological targets into which the Guide is divided, with the others being: ligand-gated ion channels, voltage-gated
ion channels, other ion channels, nuclear hormone receptors, catalytic receptors, enzymes and transporters. These are presented with nomenclature guidance and summary information on the best
available pharmacological tools, alongside key references and suggestions for further reading. The Concise Guide is published in landscape format in order to facilitate comparison of related targets.
It is a condensed version of material contemporary to late 2015, which is presented in greater detail and constantly updated on the website www.guidetopharmacology.org, superseding data presented
in the previous Guides to Receptors & Channels and the Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2013/14. It is produced in conjunction with NC-IUPHAR and provides the official IUPHAR classification
and nomenclature for human drug targets, where appropriate. It consolidates information previously curated and displayed separately in IUPHAR-DB and GRAC and provides a permanent, citable,
point-in-time record that will survive database updates.
Conflict of interest
The authors state that there are no conflicts of interest to declare.
c 2015 The Authors. British Journal of Pharmacology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of The British Pharmacological Society.
This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Glutamate family (class C), which includes metabotropic glutamate receptors, a calcium-sensing receptor and GABAB receptors, as well as three taste type 1 receptors [class C list] and a family of
pheromone receptors (V2 receptors) that are abundant in rodents but absent in man [1309].
Rhodopsin family (class A), which includes receptors for a wide variety of small molecules, neurotransmitters, peptides and hormones, together with olfactory receptors, visual pigments, taste type 2
receptors and five pheromone receptors (V1 receptors). [Class A list]
Adhesion family GPCRs are phylogenetically related to class B receptors, from which they differ by possessing large extracellular N-termini that are autoproteolytically cleaved from their 7TM domains
at a conserved "GPCR proteolysis site" (GPS) which lies within a much larger ( 320 residue) "GPCR autoproteolysis-inducing" (GAIN) domain, an evolutionary ancient mofif also found in polycystic kidney
disease 1 (PKD1)-like proteins, which has been suggested to be both required and sufficient for autoproteolysis [1538]. [Adhesion family list].
Frizzled family (class F) consists of 10 Frizzled proteins (FZD(1-10)) and Smoothened (SMO). [Frizzled family list]. The FZDs are activated by secreted lipoglycoproteins of the WNT family, whereas
SMO is indirectly activated by the Hedgehog (HH) family of proteins acting on the transmembrane protein Patched (PTCH).
Secretin family (class B), encoded by 15 genes in humans. The ligands for receptors in this family are polypeptide hormones of 27-141 amino-acid residues; nine of the mammalian receptors respond
to ligands that are structurally related to one another (glucagon, glucagon-like peptides (GLP-1, GLP-2), glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (GIP), secretin, vasoactive intestinal peptide (VIP),
pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) and growth-hormone-releasing hormone (GHRH) [703].
GPCR families
Family
Class B (Secretin)
Class C (Glutamate)
Adhesion
Frizzled
15
12
11
87 (54)a
390b,c
8 (1)a
26 (6)a
Sensory (taste)
10d opsins
30c taste 2
3c taste 1
Sensory (pheromone)
5c vomeronasal 1
Total
719
15
22
33
11
Class A
197a
a Numbers in brackets refer to orphan receptors for which an endogenous ligand has been proposed in at least one publication, see [396]; b [1443]; c [1309]; d [1866].
Much of our current understanding of the structure and function of GPCRs is the result of pioneering work on the visual pigment rhodopsin and on the 2 adrenoceptor, the latter culminating in the
award of the 2012 Nobel Prize in chemistry to Robert Lefkowitz and Brian Kobilka [975, 1073].
Family structure
5746
5746
5756
5756
5757
5758
5759
5764
5766
5768
5770
5774
5775
5777
5778
5780
5781
5783
5784
5785
5785
5791
5792
5793
5795
5796
5798
5799
5800
5801
Bradykinin receptors
Calcitonin receptors
Calcium-sensing receptors
Cannabinoid receptors
Chemerin receptor
Chemokine receptors
Cholecystokinin receptors
Class Frizzled GPCRs
Complement peptide receptors
Corticotropin-releasing factor receptors
Dopamine receptors
Endothelin receptors
G protein-coupled estrogen receptor
Formylpeptide receptors
Free fatty acid receptors
5803
5805
5806
5807
5809
5810
5811
5812
5814
5815
5816
5818
5819
5820
5821
GABAB receptors
Galanin receptors
Ghrelin receptor
Glucagon receptor family
Glycoprotein hormone receptors
Gonadotrophin-releasing hormone receptors
GPR18, GPR55 and GPR119
Histamine receptors
Hydroxycarboxylic acid receptors
Kisspeptin receptor
Leukotriene receptors
Lysophospholipid (LPA) receptors
Lysophospholipid (S1P) receptors
Melanin-concentrating hormone receptors
Melanocortin receptors
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
5822
5823
5826
5827
5828
5829
5829
5830
5832
5833
Melatonin receptors
Metabotropic glutamate receptors
Motilin receptor
Neuromedin U receptors
Neuropeptide FF/neuropeptide AF receptors
Neuropeptide S receptor
Neuropeptide W/neuropeptide B receptors
Neuropeptide Y receptors
Neurotensin receptors
Opioid receptors
5835
5836
5836
5838
5839
5840
5841
5842
5844
5846
Orexin receptors
Oxoglutarate receptor
P2Y receptors
Parathyroid hormone receptors
Platelet-activating factor receptor
Prokineticin receptors
Prolactin-releasing peptide receptor
Prostanoid receptors
Proteinase-activated receptors
QRFP receptor
5846
5848
5850
5850
5852
5852
5854
5854
5856
Class A Orphans
G protein-coupled receptors ! Orphan and other 7TM receptors ! Class A Orphans
Overview: Table 1 lists a number of putative GPCRs identified by NC-IUPHAR [530], for which preliminary evidence for an endogenous ligand has been published, or for which there exists a potential
link to a disease, or disorder. These GPCRs have recently been reviewed in detail [396]. The GPCRs in Table 1 are all Class A, rhodopsin-like GPCRs. Class A orphan GPCRs not listed in Table 1 are putative
GPCRs with as-yet unidentified endogenous ligands.
Table 1: Class A orphan GPCRs with putative endogenous ligands
GPR1
GPR3
GPR4
GPR6
GPR12
GPR15
GPR17
GPR20
GPR22
GPR26
GPR31
GPR34
GPR35
GPR37
GPR39
GPR50
GPR63
GRP65
GPR68
GPR75
GPR84
GPR87
GPR88
GPR132
GPR149
GPR161
GPR183
LGR4
LGR5
LGR6
MAS1
MRGPRD
MRGPRX1
MRGPRX2
P2RY10
TAAR2
In addition the orphan receptors GPR18, GPR55 and GPR119 which are reported to respond to endogenous agents analogous to the endogenous cannabinoid ligands have been grouped together
(GPR18, GPR55 and GPR119).
Nomenclature
GPR1
GPR3
GPR4
HGNC, UniProt
GPR1, P46091
GPR3, P46089
GPR4, P46093
GPR6, P46095
Endogenous ligand
Protons
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
diphenyleneiodonium chloride
(pEC50 6) [2091]
GPR6
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
(continued)
Nomenclature
GPR1
GPR3
GPR4
GPR6
Comments
Nomenclature
GPR12
GPR15
GPR17
GPR19
HGNC, UniProt
GPR12, P47775
GPR15, P49685
GPR17, Q13304
GPR19, Q15760
Endogenous
agonists
Comments
Reports that
sphingosine 1-phosphate is a
ligand of GPR12 [814, 1921] have
not been replicated in
arrestin-based assays [1785,
2093]. Gene disruption results in
dyslipidemia and obesity [154].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
GPR20
GPR21
GPR22
GPR25
GPR26
HGNC, UniProt
GPR20, Q99678
GPR21, Q99679
GPR22, Q99680
GPR25, O00155
GPR26, Q8NDV2
Comments
Nomenclature
GPR27
GPR31
GPR32
GPR33
GPR34
HGNC, UniProt
GPR27, Q9NS67
GPR31, O00270
GPR32, O75388
GPR33, Q49SQ1
GPR34, Q9UPC5
Rank order of
potency
Endogenous
agonists
lysophosphatidylserine
(Selective) (pEC50 6.66.9) [960,
1817]
Labelled ligands
Comments
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
GPR35
GPR37
GPR37L1
GPR39
GPR42
HGNC, UniProt
GPR35, Q9HC97
GPR37, O15354
GPR37L1, O60883
GPR42, O15529
Endogenous agonists
GPR39, O43194
Zn2+ [775]
Agonists
Comments
Nomenclature
GPR45
GPR50
GPR52
GPR61
HGNC, UniProt
GPR45, Q9Y5Y3
GPR50, Q13585
GPR52, Q9Y2T5
GPR61, Q9BZJ8
Comments
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
GPR62
GPR63
GPR65
GPR68
GPR75
HGNC, UniProt
GPR62, Q9BZJ7
GPR63, Q9BZJ6
GPR65, Q8IYL9
GPR68, Q15743
GPR75, O95800
Endogenous
ligand
Protons
Protons
Comments
Nomenclature
GPR78
GPR79
GPR82
GPR83
GPR83, Q9NYM4
Zn2+ (pEC 5) [1351] Mouse
GPR84, Q9NQS5
HGNC, UniProt
GPR78, Q96P69
GPR79,
GPR82, Q96P67
Agonists
Comments
GPR84
50
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
GPR85
GPR87
GPR88
GPR101
HGNC, UniProt
GPR85, P60893
GPR87, Q9BY21
GPR88, Q9GZN0
GPR101, Q96P66
Endogenous
agonists
Agonists
Comments
Proposed to regulate
hippocampal neurogenesis in
the adult, as well as
neurogenesis-dependent
learning and memory [303].
Nomenclature
GPR132
GPR135
HGNC, UniProt
GPR132, Q9UNW8
Endogenous
ligand
Protons
Agonists
Comments
GPR139
GPR141
GPR142
GPR135, Q8IZ08
GPR139, Q6DWJ6
GPR141, Q7Z602
GPR142, Q7Z601
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
GPR146
GPR148
GPR149
GPR150
GPR151
HGNC, UniProt
GPR146, Q96CH1
GPR148, Q8TDV2
GPR149, Q86SP6
GPR150, Q8NGU9
GPR151, Q8TDV0
Comments
Nomenclature
GPR152
GPR153
GPR160
GPR161
GPR162
HGNC, UniProt
GPR152, Q8TDT2
GPR153, Q6NV75
GPR160, Q9UJ42
GPR161, Q8N6U8
GPR162, Q16538
Comments
Nomenclature
GPR171
GPR173
GPR174
GPR176
GPR182
HGNC, UniProt
GPR171, O14626
GPR173, Q9NS66
GPR174, Q9BXC1
GPR176, Q14439
GPR182, O15218
Endogenous
agonists
lysophosphatidylserine (pEC50
7.1) [825]
Comments
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
GPR183
LGR4
HGNC, UniProt
GPR183, P32249
Endogenous
agonists
7,25-dihydroxycholesterol
(Selective) (pEC50 8.19.8)
[694, 1125],
7,27-dihydroxycholesterol
(Selective) (pEC50 8.9) [1125],
7, 25-dihydroxycholesterol
(Selective) (pEC50 8.7) [1125],
7, 27-dihydroxycholesterol
(Selective) (pEC50 7.3) [1125]
Agonists
Comments
LGR5
LGR6
MAS1
LGR4, Q9BXB1
LGR5, O75473
LGR6, Q9HBX8
MAS1, P04201
R-spondin-1 (RSPO1,
Q2MKA7) [266, 2140],
R-spondin-2 (RSPO2,
Q6UXX9) [266, 2140],
R-spondin-3 (RSPO3,
Q9BXY4) [266, 2140],
R-spondin-4 (RSPO4,
Q2I0M5) [266, 2140]
angiotensin-(1-7) (AGT,
P01019) (pKi 7.3) [612]
Mouse
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
MAS1L
MRGPRD
MRGPRE
MRGPRF
MRGPRG
HGNC, UniProt
MAS1L, P35410
MRGPRD, Q8TDS7
MRGPRE, Q86SM8
MRGPRF, Q96AM1
MRGPRG, Q86SM5
Endogenous
agonists
Comments
Nomenclature
MRGPRX1
MRGPRX2
MRGPRX3
MRGPRX4
HGNC, UniProt
MRGPRX1, Q96LB2
MRGPRX2, Q96LB1
MRGPRX3, Q96LB0
MRGPRX4, Q96LA9
Endogenous
agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Comments
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
OPN3
OPN4
OPN5
HGNC, UniProt
OPN3, Q9H1Y3
OPN4, Q9UHM6
OPN5, Q6U736
P2RY8, Q86VZ1
Comments
Nomenclature
P2RY8
P2RY10
TAAR2
TAAR3
TAAR4P
HGNC, UniProt
P2RY10, O00398
TAAR2, Q9P1P5
TAAR3, Q9P1P4
TAAR4P,
Rank order of
potency
Endogenous
agonists
Comments
Nomenclature
TAAR5
TAAR6
TAAR8
TAAR9
HGNC, UniProt
TAAR5, O14804
TAAR6, Q96RI8
TAAR8, Q969N4
TAAR9, Q96RI9
Comments
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Class C Orphans
G protein-coupled receptors ! Orphan and other 7TM receptors ! Class C Orphans
Nomenclature
GPR156
GPR158
GPR179
GPRC5A
GPRC5B
GPRC5C
GPRC5D
HGNC, UniProt
GPR156, Q8NFN8
GPR158, Q5T848
GPR179, Q6PRD1
GPRC5A, Q8NFJ5
GPRC5B, Q9NZH0
GPRC5C, Q9NQ84
GPRC5D, Q9NZD1
Taste 1 receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Orphan and other 7TM receptors ! Taste 1 receptors
Overview: Whilst the taste of acid and salty foods appear to be
sensed by regulation of ion channel activity, bitter, sweet and umami
tastes are sensed by specialised GPCR. Two classes of taste GPCR
have been identified, T1R and T2R, which are similar in sequence
and structure to Class C and Class A GPCR, respectively. Activation
of taste receptors appears to involve gustducin- (Gt3) and G14mediated signalling, although the precise mechanisms remain obscure. Gene disruption studies suggest the involvement of PLC2
[2122], TRPM5 [2122] and IP3 [764] receptors in post-receptor signalling of taste receptors. Although predominantly associated with
the oral cavity, taste receptors are also located elsewhere, including further down the gastrointestinal system, in the lungs and in the
brain.
Sweet/Umami
T1R3 acts as an obligate partner in T1R1/T1R3 and T1R2/T1R3 heterodimers, which sense umami or sweet, respectively. T1R1/T1R3 heterodimers respond to L-glutamic acid and may be positively allosterically
modulated by 5-nucleoside monophosphates, such as 5-GMP [1096]. T1R2/T1R3 heterodimers respond to sugars, such as sucrose, and artificial sweeteners, such as saccharin [1376].
Nomenclature
TAS1R1
TAS1R2
TAS1R3
HGNC, UniProt
TAS1R1, Q7RTX1
TAS1R2, Q8TE23
TAS1R3, Q7RTX0
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Taste 2 receptors
Nomenclature
TAS2R1
TAS2R3
TAS2R4
TAS2R5
TAS2R7
TAS2R8
HGNC, UniProt
TAS2R1, Q9NYW7
TAS2R3, Q9NYW6
TAS2R4, Q9NYW5
TAS2R5, Q9NYW4
TAS2R7, Q9NYW3
TAS2R8, Q9NYW2
Nomenclature
TAS2R9
TAS2R10
TAS2R13
TAS2R14
TAS2R16
TAS2R19
HGNC, UniProt
TAS2R9, Q9NYW1
TAS2R10, Q9NYW0
TAS2R13, Q9NYV9
TAS2R14, Q9NYV8
TAS2R16, Q9NYV7
TAS2R19, P59542
Nomenclature
TAS2R20
TAS2R30
TAS2R31
TAS2R38
TAS2R39
TAS2R40
HGNC, UniProt
TAS2R20, P59543
TAS2R30, P59541
TAS2R31, P59538
TAS2R38, P59533
TAS2R39, P59534
TAS2R40, P59535
Nomenclature
TAS2R41
TAS2R42
TAS2R43
TAS2R45
TAS2R46
TAS2R50
TAS2R60
HGNC, UniProt
TAS2R41, P59536
TAS2R42, Q7RTR8
TAS2R43, P59537
TAS2R45, P59539
TAS2R46, P59540
TAS2R50, P59544
TAS2R60, P59551
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
GPR107
GPR137
OR51E1
TPRA1
GPR143
GPR157
HGNC, UniProt
GPR107, Q5VW38
GPR137, Q96N19
OR51E1, Q8TCB6
TPRA1, Q86W33
GPR143, P51810
GPR157, Q5UAW9
Endogenous
agonists
levodopa [1141]
Comments
GPR107 is a member of
the LUSTR family of
proteins found in both
plants and animals,
having similar topology
to Gprotein-coupled
receptors [461]
OR51E1 is a putative
olfactory receptor.
TPRA1 shows no
homology to known G
protein-coupled
receptors.
Loss-of-function
mutations underlie ocular
albinism type 1 [103].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
5-Hydroxytryptamine receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! 5-Hydroxytryptamine receptors
Overview: 5-HT receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the
NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on 5-HT receptors [789] and
subsequently revised [707]) are, with the exception of the
ionotropic 5-HT3 class, GPCR receptors where the endogenous agonist is 5-hydroxytryptamine. The diversity of metabotropic 5-HT
Nomenclature
5-HT1A receptor
5-HT1B receptor
HGNC, UniProt
HTR1A, P08908
HTR1B, P28222
Agonists
Selective
agonists
Antagonists
Selective
antagonists
5-HT1D receptor
5-ht1e receptor
5-HT1F receptor
HTR1D, P28221
HTR1E, P28566
HTR1F, P30939
dihydroergotamine (pKi
9.29.9) [684, 1084, 1091],
ergotamine (pKi 9.1) [616],
L-694,247 (pKi 9) [2052],
naratriptan (pKi 8.49) [432,
1365, 1577], zolmitriptan (pKi
8.9) [1365], frovatriptan (pKi
8.4) [2069], rizatriptan (pKi
7.9) [1365]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
(continued)
Nomenclature
Labelled ligands
5-HT1A receptor
[3 H]robalzotan (Antagonist)
5-HT1B receptor
[3 H]N-methyl-AZ10419369
(Agonist, Partial agonist) (pKd
9.4) [1182], [3 H]GR 125,743
5-HT1D receptor
[3 H]eletriptan (Agonist) (pK
5-ht1e receptor
[3 H]5-HT (Agonist) (pK
8.18.2) [1237, 1463]
5-HT1F receptor
[3 H]LY334370 (Agonist) (pK
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
5-HT2A receptor
5-HT2B receptor
5-HT2C receptor
5-HT4 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
HTR2A, P28223
HTR2B, P41595
HTR2C, P28335
HTR4, Q13639
Agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
(continued)
Nomenclature
5-HT2A receptor
5-HT2B receptor
5-HT2C receptor
5-HT4 receptor
Selective
antagonists
Labelled ligands
Nomenclature
5-ht5a receptor
HGNC, UniProt
HTR5A, P47898
5-ht5b receptor
HTR5BP,
5-HT6 receptor
HTR6, P50406
5-HT7 receptor
HTR7, P34969
Selective agonists
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
(continued)
Nomenclature
5-ht5a receptor
5-ht5b receptor
5-HT6 receptor
5-HT7 receptor
Antagonists
Selective
antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments: Tabulated pKi and KD values refer to binding to human 5-HT receptors unless indicated otherwise. The nomenclature
of 5-HT1B /5-HT1D receptors has been revised [707]. Only the nonrodent form of the receptor was previously called 5-HT1D : the human 5-HT1B receptor (tabulated) displays a different pharmacology
to the rodent forms of the receptor due to Thr335 of the human
Further Reading
Bockaert J et al. (2011) 5-HT(4) receptors, a place in the sun: act two. Curr Opin Pharmacol 11: 87-93
[PMID:21342787]
Codony X et al. (2011) 5-HT(6) receptor and cognition.
[PMID:21330210]
94-100
Hartig PR et al. (1996) Alignment of receptor nomenclature with the human genome: classification of
5-HT1B and 5-HT1D receptor subtypes. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 17: 103-5 [PMID:8936345]
Hayes DJ et al. (2011) 5-HT receptors and reward-related behaviour: a review. Neurosci Biobehav Rev 35:
1419-49 [PMID:21402098]
Hoyer D et al.
(1994) International Union of Pharmacology classification of receptors for 5hydroxytryptamine (Serotonin). Pharmacol. Rev. 46: 157-203 [PMID:7938165]
Leopoldo M et al. (2011) Serotonin 5-HT7 receptor agents: Structure-activity relationships and potential therapeutic applications in central nervous system disorders. Pharmacol. Ther. 129: 120-48
[PMID:20923682]
Meltzer HY et al. (2011) The role of serotonin receptors in the action of atypical antipsychotic drugs. Curr
Opin Pharmacol 11: 59-67 [PMID:21420906]
Roberts AJ et al. (2012) The 5-HT(7) receptor in learning and memory. Hippocampus 22: 762-71
[PMID:21484935]
Sargent BJ et al. (2011) Targeting 5-HT receptors for the treatment of obesity. Curr Opin Pharmacol 11:
52-8 [PMID:21330209]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
two pharmacologically characterised allosteric sites on muscarinic receptors, one defined by it binding gallamine, strychnine and brucine,
and the other defined by the binding of KT 5720, WIN 62,577,
WIN 51,708 and staurosporine [1052, 1053].
Nomenclature
M1 receptor
M2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
CHRM1, P11229
CHRM2, P08172
Agonists
carbachol (pKi 3.25.3) [334, 846, 2040], pilocarpine (Partial agonist) (pKi 5.1) [846],
bethanechol (pKi 4) [846]
Antagonists
glycopyrrolate (pIC50 9.9) [1801], umeclidinium (pKi 9.8) [1035, 1632], AE9C90CB (pKi
9.7) [1749], propantheline (pKi 9.7) [797], atropine (pKi 8.59.6) [334, 552, 759, 797,
1486, 1762], tiotropium (pKi 9.6) [428], 4-DAMP (pKi 9.2) [458], dicyclomine (pKi 9.1)
[68], scopolamine (pKi 9) [797], trihexyphenidyl (pKi 8.9) [68], tripitramine (pKi 8.8)
[1176], UH-AH 37 (pKi 8.68.7) [609, 2012], tolterodine (pKi 8.58.7) [609, 1749],
oxybutynin (pKi 8.6) [410, 818, 1749], darifenacin (pKi 7.58.3) [609, 730, 759, 818,
1749], pirenzepine (pKi 7.88.3) [238, 458, 730, 797, 875, 2012], solifenacin (pKi 7.6)
[818, 1749], AFDX384 (pKi 7.5) [458], AQ-RA 741 (pKi 7.27.5) [458, 609],
methoctramine (pKi 6.67.3) [458, 493, 730, 1762], himbacine (pKi 6.77.1) [458, 875,
1286], muscarinic toxin 3 (pKi 7.1) [875], otenzepad (pKd 6.2) [493]
tiotropium (pKi 9.9) [428], umeclidinium (pKi 9.8) [1035, 1632], propantheline (pKi
9.5) [797], glycopyrrolate (Full agonist) (pIC50 9.3) [1801], atropine (pKi 7.89.2) [238,
310, 759, 797, 1002, 1373, 1486], AE9C90CB (pKi 8.6) [1749], tolterodine (Inverse
agonist) (pKi 8.48.6) [609, 1373, 1749], AQ-RA 741 (pKi 8.4) [458, 609], himbacine
(pKi 7.98.4) [458, 875, 1002, 1286], methoctramine (pKi 7.38.4) [238, 458, 493,
730, 1002, 1373], 4-DAMP (pKi 8.3) [1002], AFDX384 (pKi 8.2) [458], biperiden (pKd
8.2) [173], oxybutynin (pKi 7.78.1) [818, 1749], darifenacin (Inverse agonist) (pKi
77.6) [609, 730, 759, 818, 1373, 1749], UH-AH 37 (pKi 7.37.4) [609, 2012],
otenzepad (pKi 6.77.2) [238, 1002], solifenacin (pKi 6.97.1) [818, 1749], pirenzepine
(pKi 66.7) [238, 458, 730, 797, 875, 1002, 1373, 2012], VU0255035 (pKi 6.2) [1717],
muscarinic toxin 3 (pKi <6) [875], guanylpirenzepine (pKi 5.3) [1966] Rat,
muscarinic toxin 7 (pKi <5) [1414]
Selective
antagonists
biperiden (pKd 9.3) [173], VU0255035 (pKi 7.8) [1717], guanylpirenzepine (pKi
7.37.6) [23, 1966] Rat
Allosteric
modulators
W-84 (Negative) (pKd 67.5) [1299, 1908], C7 /3-phth (Negative) (pKd 7.1) [335],
alcuronium (Negative) (pKd 6.16.9) [846, 1908], gallamine (Negative) (pKd 5.96.3)
[348, 1049], LY2119620 (Positive) (pKd 5.7) [383, 1010], LY2033298 (Positive) (pKd
4.4) [1933]
[3 H]QNB (Antagonist) (pK 10.110.6) [1486], Cy3B-telenzepine (Antagonist) (pK
Labelled ligands
(pKd 10.5) [742], [3 H]N-methyl scopolamine (Antagonist) (pKd 9.410.3) [280, 334,
336, 759, 846, 847, 875, 932, 1049], [3 H](+)telenzepine (Antagonist) (pK 9.4) [500]
i
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
M3 receptor
CHRM3, P20309
M4 receptor
CHRM4, P08173
M5 receptor
CHRM5, P08912
Agonists
Antagonists
Selective
antagonists
Allosteric
modulators
Selective
allosteric
modulators
Labelled ligands
HGNC, UniProt
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Comments: LY2033298 and BQCA have also been shown to directly activate the M4 and M1 receptors, respectively, via an allosteric site [1059, 1060, 1366, 1367]. The allosteric site for
gallamine and strychnine on M2 receptors can be labelled by
[3 H]dimethyl-W84 [1908]. McN-A-343 is a functionally selective
partial agonist that appears to interact in a bitopic mode with both
the orthosteric and an allosteric site on the M2 muscarinic recep-
Further Reading
Caulfield MP et al. (1998) International Union of Pharmacology. XVII. Classification of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors. Pharmacol. Rev. 50: 279-290 [PMID:9647869]
Kruse AC et al. (2014) Muscarinic acetylcholine receptors: novel opportunities for drug development.
Nat Rev Drug Discov 13: 549-60 [PMID:24903776]
Leach K et al. (2012) Structure-function studies of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors. Handb Exp Pharmacol 29-48 [PMID:22222693]
Gregory KJ et al. (2007) Allosteric modulation of muscarinic acetylcholine receptors. Curr Neuropharmacol
5: 157-67 [PMID:19305798]
Valant C et al. (2012) The best of both worlds? Bitopic orthosteric/allosteric ligands of g protein-coupled
receptors. Annu. Rev. Pharmacol. Toxicol. 52: 153-78 [PMID:21910627]
Adenosine receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Adenosine receptors
Overview: Adenosine receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Adenosine Receptors [541]) are activated by the endogenous ligand adenosine (potentially inosine
also at A3 receptors). Crystal structures for the antagonist-bound and agonist-bound A2A adenosine receptors have been described [835, 2065].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
A1 receptor
ADORA1, P30542
A2A receptor
ADORA2A, P29274
A2B receptor
ADORA2B, P29275
A3 receptor
ADORA3, P0DMS8
Agonists
(Sub)familyselective
agonists
HGNC, UniProt
Selective agonists
Antagonists
(Sub)familyselective
antagonists
Selective
antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments: Adenosine inhibits many intracellular ATP-utilising enzymes, including adenylyl cyclase (P-site). A pseudogene exists for
the A2B adenosine receptor (ADORA2BP1) with 79% identity to the
A2B adenosine receptor cDNA coding sequence, but which is unable
to encode a functional receptor [841]. DPCPX also exhibits antagonism at A2B receptors (pKi ca. 7,[34, 968]). Antagonists at A3 recep-
tors exhibit marked species differences, such that only MRS1523 and
MRS1191 are selective at the rat A3 receptor. In the absence of other
adenosine receptors, [3 H]DPCPX and [3 H]ZM 241385 can also be
used to label A2B receptors (KD ca. 30 and 60 nM respectively).
[125 I]AB-MECA also binds to A1 receptors [968]. [3 H]CGS 21680 is
relatively selective for A2A receptors, but may also bind to other sites
[1445, 1946]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Fredholm BB et al. (2011) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXXI. Nomenclature
and classification of adenosine receptorsan update. Pharmacol. Rev. 63: 1-34 [PMID:21303899]
Mundell S et al. (2011) Adenosine receptor desensitization and trafficking. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1808:
1319-28 [PMID:20550943]
Gblys A et al. (2011) Allosteric modulation of adenosine receptors. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1808:
1309-18 [PMID:20599682]
Ponnoth DS et al. (2011) Adenosine receptors and vascular inflammation. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1808:
1429-34 [PMID:20832387]
Headrick JP et al. (2011) Adenosine and its receptors in the heart: regulation, retaliation and adaptation.
Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1808: 1413-28 [PMID:21094127]
Wei CJ et al. (2011) Normal and abnormal functions of adenosine receptors in the central nervous system
revealed by genetic knockout studies. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1808: 1358-79 [PMID:21185258]
Lasley RD. (2011) Adenosine receptors and membrane microdomains. Biochim. Biophys. Acta 1808:
1284-9 [PMID:20888790]
Overview: Adhesion GPCRs are structurally identified on the basis of a large extracellular region, similar to the Class B GPCR, but which is linked to the 7TM region by a "stalk" motif containing a GPCR proteolytic
site. The N-terminus often shares structural homology with proteins such as lectins and immunoglobulins, leading to the term adhesion GPCR [543, 2097]. The nomenclature of these receptors was
revised in 2015 as recommended by NC-IUPHAR and the Adhesion GPCR Consortium [683].
Nomenclature
ADGRA1
ADGRA2
ADGRA3
ADGRB1
ADGRB2
HGNC, UniProt
ADGRA1, Q86SQ6
ADGRA2, Q96PE1
ADGRA3, Q8IWK6
ADGRB1, O14514
ADGRB2, O60241
Endogenous agonists
phosphatidylserine [1461]
Comments
Nomenclature
ADGRB3
CELSR1
CELSR2
CELSR3
ADGRD1
HGNC, UniProt
ADGRB3, O60242
CELSR1, Q9NYQ6
CELSR2, Q9HCU4
CELSR3, Q9NYQ7
ADGRD1, Q6QNK2
Nomenclature
ADGRD2
ADGRE1
ADGRE2
ADGRE3
ADGRE4P
HGNC, UniProt
ADGRD2, Q7Z7M1
ADGRE1, Q14246
ADGRE2, Q9UHX3
ADGRE3, Q9BY15
ADGRE4P, Q86SQ3
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
ADGRE5
ADGRF1
ADGRF2
ADGRF3
ADGRF4
HGNC, UniProt
ADGRE5, P48960
ADGRF1, Q5T601
ADGRF2, Q8IZF7
ADGRF3, Q8IZF5
ADGRF4, Q8IZF3
Nomenclature
ADGRF5
ADGRG1
ADGRG2
ADGRG3
ADGRG4
HGNC, UniProt
ADGRF5, Q8IZF2
ADGRG1, Q9Y653
ADGRG2, Q8IZP9
ADGRG3, Q86Y34
ADGRG4, Q8IZF6
Comments
Nomenclature
ADGRG5
ADGRG6
ADGRG7
ADGRL1
HGNC, UniProt
ADGRG5, Q8IZF4
ADGRG6, Q86SQ4
ADGRG7, Q96K78
ADGRL1, O94910
Nomenclature
ADGRL2
ADGRL3
ADGRL4
ADGRV1
HGNC, UniProt
ADGRL2, O95490
ADGRL3, Q9HAR2
ADGRL4, Q9HBW9
ADGRV1, Q8WXG9
Comments
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Adrenoceptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Adrenoceptors
Overview:
Adrenoceptors, 1
1 -Adrenoceptors (nomenclature as agreed by the
NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Adrenoceptors [248],
see also [752]) are activated by the endogenous agonists (-)-adrenaline and (-)-noradrenaline with equal potency.
Phenylephrine, methoxamine and cirazoline are agonists selective for 1 -adrenoceptors relative to 2 -adrenoceptors, while
prazosin (8.5-10.5) and corynanthine (6.5-7.5) are antagonists con-
Nomenclature
selective 1-adrenoceptor agonists have led to their use as nasal decongestants; antagonists are used to treat hypertension (doxazosin,
prazosin) and benign prostatic hyperplasia (alfuzosin, tamsulosin).
The combined 1 - and 2 -adrenoceptor antagonist carvedilol is
widely used to treat congestive heart failure, although the contribution of 1 -adrenoceptor blockade to the therapeutic effect is
unclear. Several anti-depressants and anti-psychotic drugs possess
1 -adrenoceptor blocking properties that are believed to contribute
to side effects such as orthostatic hypotension and extrapyramidal effects.
1A -adrenoceptor
ADRA1A, P35348
1B -adrenoceptor
HGNC, UniProt
ADRA1B, P35368
1D -adrenoceptor
ADRA1D, P25100
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Adrenoceptors, 2
Adrenoceptors 5770
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
2 -Adrenoceptors (nomenclature as agreed by NC-IUPHAR
Subcommittee on Adrenoceptors; [248]) are activated by
endogenous agonists with a relative potency of (-)-adrenaline >
(-)-noradrenaline. Brimonidine and talipexole are agonists selective
for 2 -adrenoceptors relative to 1 -adrenoceptors, rauwolscine and
yohimbine are antagonists selective for 2 -adrenoceptors relative
to 1 -adrenoceptors. [3 H]rauwolscine (1 nM), [3 H]brimonidine (5
nM) and [3 H]RX821002 (0.5 nM and 0.1 nM at 2C ) are relatively
selective radioligands. There is species variation in the pharmacology of the 2A -adrenoceptor; for example, yohimbine, rauwolscine
and oxymetazoline have an 20-fold higher affinity for the human
2A -adrenoceptor compared to the rat, mouse and bovine recep-
Nomenclature
tor. These 2A orthologues are sometimes referred to as 2D adrenoceptors. Multiple mutations of 2 -adrenoceptors have been
described, some of which are associated with alterations in function.
Presynaptic 2 -adrenoceptors are widespread in the nervous system
and regulate many functions, hence the multiplicity of actions. The
effects of classical (not subtype selective) 2 -adrenoceptor agonists
such as clonidine, guanabenz and brimonidine on central baroreflex control (hypotension and bradycardia), as well as their ability
to induce hypnotic effects and analgesia, and their ability to modulate seizure activity and platelet aggregation are mediated by 2A adrenoceptors. Clonidine has been used as an anti-hypertensive and
also to counteract opioid withdrawal. Actions on imidazoline recognition sites may contribute to the pharmacological effects of cloni-
HGNC, UniProt
2A -adrenoceptor
ADRA2A, P08913
2B -adrenoceptor
ADRA2B, P18089
2C -adrenoceptor
ADRA2C, P18825
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
Adrenoceptors,
-Adrenoceptors (nomenclature as agreed by the
NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Adrenoceptors, [248])
are activated by the endogenous agonists (-)-adrenaline and
(-)-noradrenaline. Isoprenaline is a synthetic agonist selective for
-adrenoceptors relative to 1 - and 2 -adrenoceptors, while for 1
and 2 adrenoceptors, propranolol (pKi 8.2-9.2) and cyanopindolol
(pKi 10.0-11.0) are relatively selective antagonists. (-)-noradrenaline,
xamoterol and (-)-Ro 363 are agonists that show selectivity for 1 -
Adrenoceptors 5771
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
of [125 I]-cyanopindolol in the presence of appropriate concentrations of 1 - and 2 -adrenoceptor antagonists. [3 H]L-748337 is a
3 -selective radioligand. Fluorescent ligands such as BODIPY-TMRCGP12177 are also increasingly being used to track -adrenoceptors
at the cellular level [86]. Somewhat selective 1 -adrenoceptor selective agonists (denopamine, dobutamine) are used short-term to
Nomenclature
powerful bronchodilators widely used to treat respiratory disorders. There are both short (salbutamol, terbutaline) and long acting
drugs (formoterol, salmeterol). Although many first generation
-adrenoceptor antagonists (propranolol) block both 1 - and 2 adrenoceptors there are no 2 -adrenoceptor-selective antagonists
used therapeutically. The 3 -adrenoceptor agonist mirabegron is
used to control overactive bladder syndrome.
HGNC, UniProt
1 -adrenoceptor
ADRB1, P08588
2 -adrenoceptor
ADRB2, P07550
3 -adrenoceptor
ADRB3, P13945
(-)-noradrenaline = (-)-adrenaline
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments
1144, 1651]
Comments:
Adrenoceptors, 1
The clone originally called the 1C -adrenoceptor corresponds to
the pharmacologically defined 1A -adrenoceptor [752]. Some tis-
Adrenoceptors 5772
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
or by co-expression of 1B - or 2 -adrenoceptors to form heterodimers [670, 1917]. In smooth muscle of native blood vessels
all three 1- adrenoceptor subtypes are located on the surface and
intracellularly [1260, 1261].
Signalling is predominantly via Gq/11 but 1 -adrenoceptors also
couple to Gi/o , Gs and G12/13 . Several ligands activating 1A adrenoceptors display ligand directed signalling bias relative to noradrenaline. For example, oxymetazoline is a full agonist for extracellular acidification rate (ECAR) and a partial agonist for Ca2+ release but
does not stimulate cAMP production. Phenylephrine is biased toward
ECAR versus Ca2+ release or cAMP accumulation but not between
Ca2+ release and cAMP accumulation [495]. There are also differences between subtypes in coupling efficiency to different pathwayse.g. in some systems coupling efficiency to Ca2+ signalling is 1A >
1B > 1D , but for MAP kinase signalling is 1D > 1A > 1B . In
vascular smooth muscle, the potency of agonists is related to the predominant subtype, 1D - conveying greater agonist sensitivity than
1A -adrenoceptors [526].
Adrenoceptors, 2
ARC-239 (pKi 8.0) and prazosin (pKi 7.5) show selectivity for 2B and 2C -adrenoceptors over 2A -adrenoceptors.Oxymetazoline is
a reduced efficacy agonist and is one of many 2 -adrenoceptor agonists that are imidazolines or closely related compounds. Other
binding sites for imidazolines, distinct from 2 -adrenoceptors,
and structurally distinct from the 7TM adrenoceptors, have
been identified and classified as I1 , I2 and I3 sites [390]; catecholamines have a low affinity, while rilmenidine and moxonidine are selective ligands for these sites, evoking hypotensive effects in vivo.
I1 -imidazoline receptors are involved in
central inhibition of sympathetic tone, I2 -imidazoline receptors are an allosteric binding site on monoamine oxidase B,
and I3 -imidazoline receptors regulate insulin secretion from pancreatic -cells.
2A -adrenoceptor stimulation reduces insulin
Further Reading
Baker JG et al. (2011) Evolution of -blockers: from anti-anginal drugs to ligand-directed signalling. Trends
Pharmacol. Sci. 32: 227-34 [PMID:21429598]
Evans BA et al. (2010) Ligand-directed signalling at beta-adrenoceptors. Br. J. Pharmacol. 159: 1022-38
[PMID:20132209]
Gilsbach R et al. (2012) Are the pharmacology and physiology of _2 adrenoceptors determined by _2heteroreceptors and autoreceptors respectively? Br. J. Pharmacol. 165: 90-102 [PMID:21658028]
Cazzola M et al. (2011) (2) -adrenoceptor agonists: current and future direction. Br. J. Pharmacol. 163:
4-17 [PMID:21232045]
Jensen BC et al. (2011) Alpha-1-adrenergic receptors: targets for agonist drugs to treat heart failure. J.
Mol. Cell. Cardiol. 51: 518-28 [PMID:21118696]
Daly CJ et al. (2011) Previously unsuspected widespread cellular and tissue distribution of -adrenoceptors
and its relevance to drug action. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 32: 219-26 [PMID:21429599]
Kobilka BK. (2011) Structural insights into adrenergic receptor function and pharmacology. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 32: 213-8 [PMID:21414670]
Adrenoceptors 5773
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Langer SZ. (2015) 2-Adrenoceptors in the treatment of major neuropsychiatric disorders. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 36: 196-202 [PMID:25771972]
McGrath JC. (2015) Localization of -adrenoceptors: JR Vane Medal Lecture. Br. J. Pharmacol. 172:
1179-94 [PMID:25377869]
Michel MC et al. (2011) Are there functional _3-adrenoceptors in the human heart? Br. J. Pharmacol.
162: 817-22 [PMID:20735409]
Michel MC et al. (2011) -adrenoceptor agonist effects in experimental models of bladder dysfunction.
Pharmacol. Ther. 131: 40-9 [PMID:21510978]
Michel MC et al. (2015) Selectivity of pharmacological tools: implications for use in cell physiology. A
review in the theme: Cell signaling: proteins, pathways and mechanisms. Am. J. Physiol., Cell Physiol.
308: C505-20 [PMID:25631871]
Nishimune A et al. (2012) Phenotype pharmacology of lower urinary tract (1)-adrenoceptors. Br. J.
Pharmacol. 165: 1226-34 [PMID:21745191]
Vasudevan NT et al. (2011) Regulation of -adrenergic receptor function: an emphasis on receptor resensitization. Cell Cycle 10: 3684-91 [PMID:22041711]
Walker JK et al. (2011) New perspectives regarding (2) -adrenoceptor ligands in the treatment of asthma.
Br. J. Pharmacol. 163: 18-28 [PMID:21175591]
Angiotensin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Angiotensin receptors
Overview: The actions of angiotensin II (AGT, P01019) (Ang II) are mediated by AT1 and AT2 receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Angiotensin Receptors
[2137]), which have around 30% sequence similarity. Endogenous ligands are angiotensin II (AGT, P01019) and angiotensin III (AGT, P01019) (Ang III), while angiotensin I (AGT, P01019) is weakly active in some
systems.
Nomenclature
AT1 receptor
AT2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
AGTR1, P30556
AGTR2, P50052
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
PD123177 (pIC50 8.59.5) [291, 321, 450] Rat, EMA401 (pIC50 8.59.3) [518,
1582, 1767], PD123319 (pKd 8.79.2) [449, 2025, 2139]
Labelled ligands
(pKd 9.2) [305] Rat, [3 H]eprosartan (Antagonist) (pKd 9.1) [21] Rat,
[3 H]valsartan (Antagonist) (pIC50 8.89) [1954], [125 I]EXP985 (Antagonist)
(pKd 8.8) [322] Rat, [3 H]losartan (Antagonist) (pKd 8.2) [294] Rat
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Comments: AT1 receptors are predominantly coupled to Gq/11 ,
however they are also linked to arrestin recruitment and stimulate G
protein-independent arrestin signalling [1156]. Most species express
a single AGTR1 gene, but two related agtr1a and agtr1b receptor
genes are expressed in rodents. The AT2 receptor counteracts several of the growth responses initiated by the AT1 receptors. The AT2
receptor is much less abundant than the AT1 receptor in adult tissues
and is upregulated in pathological conditions. AT1 receptor antagonists bearing substituted 4-phenylquinoline moieties have been syn-
Further Reading
Ellis B et al. (2012) Evidence for a functional intracellular angiotensin system in the proximal tubule of
the kidney. Am. J. Physiol. Regul. Integr. Comp. Physiol. 302: R494-509 [PMID:22170616]
Karnik SS et al. (2015) International Union of Pharmacology. LXXXIX. Angiotensin Receptors: Interpreters
of pathophysiological angiotensinergic stimuli. Pharmacological Reviews
MacKenzie A. (2011) Endothelium-derived vasoactive agents, AT1 receptors and inflammation. Pharmacol. Ther. 131: 187-203 [PMID:21115037]
Patel BM et al. (2012) Aldosterone and angiotensin: Role in diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Eur. J.
Pharmacol. 697: 1-12 [PMID:23041273]
Putnam K et al. (2012) The renin-angiotensin system: a target of and contributor to dyslipidemias, altered
glucose homeostasis, and hypertension of the metabolic syndrome. Am. J. Physiol. Heart Circ. Physiol.
302: H1219-30 [PMID:22227126]
Sev Pessa B et al. (2013) Key developments in renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system inhibition. Nat
Rev Nephrol 9: 26-36 [PMID:23165302]
Zhang H et al. (2015) Structure of the Angiotensin receptor revealed by serial femtosecond crystallography. Cell 161: 833-44 [PMID:25913193]
de Gasparo M et al. (2000) International Union of Pharmacology. XXIII. The angiotensin II receptors.
Pharmacol. Rev. 52: 415-472 [PMID:10977869]
Apelin receptor
G protein-coupled receptors ! Apelin receptor
Overview: The apelin receptor (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on the apelin receptor [1510]) responds to apelin, a 36 amino-acid peptide derived initially from
bovine stomach. Apelin-36 (APLN, Q9ULZ1), apelin-13 (APLN, Q9ULZ1) and [Pyr1 ]apelin-13 (APLN, Q9ULZ1) are the predominant endogenous ligands which are cleaved from a 77 amino-acid precursor peptide
(APLN, Q9ULZ1) by a so far unidentified enzymatic pathway [1864]. A second family of peptides discovered independently and named Elabela [323] or Toddler, that has little sequence similarity to apelin, has been
proposed as a second endogenous apelin receptor ligand [1475].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
apelin receptor
HGNC, UniProt
APLNR, P35414
[Pyr1 ]apelin-13 (APLN, Q9ULZ1) apelin-13 (APLN, Q9ULZ1) > apelin-36 (APLN, Q9ULZ1) [503, 1864]
Rank order of
potency
Endogenous agonists
apelin-13 (APLN, Q9ULZ1) (Selective) (pIC50 8.89.5) [503, 785, 1254], apelin receptor early endogenous ligand (APELA, P0DMC3) (Selective) (pKd 9.3) [412], apelin-17
(APLN, Q9ULZ1) (Selective) (pIC 7.99) [468, 1254], [Pyr1 ]apelin-13 (APLN, Q9ULZ1) (Selective) (pIC 78.8) [918, 1254], Elabela/Toddler-21 (APELA, P0DMC3) (pIC
50
50
50
8.7) [2086], Elabela/Toddler-32 (APELA, P0DMC3) (pIC50 8.7) [2086], apelin-36 (APLN, Q9ULZ1) (Selective) (pIC50 8.28.6) [503, 785, 918, 1254], Elabela/Toddler-11 (APELA,
P0DMC3) (pIC50 7.2) [2086]
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments: Potency order determined for heterologously expressed human apelin receptor (pD2 values range from 9.5 to 8.6). The apelin receptor may also act as a co-receptor with CD4 for isolates of human
immunodeficiency virus, with apelin blocking this function [279]. A modified apelin-13 peptide, apelin-13(F13A) was reported to block the hypotensive response to apelin in rat in vivo [1067], however, this peptide
exhibits agonist activity in HEK293 cells stably expressing the recombinant apelin receptor [503].
Further Reading
Chandrasekaran B et al. (2008) The role of apelin in cardiovascular function and heart failure. Eur. J. Heart
Fail. 10: 725-32 [PMID:18583184]
Langelaan DN et al. (2009) Structural insight into G-protein coupled receptor binding by apelin. Biochemistry 48: 537-48 [PMID:19123778]
Cheng B et al. (2012) Neuroprotection of apelin and its signaling pathway. Peptides 37: 171-3
[PMID:22820556]
OCarroll AM et al. (2013) The apelin receptor APJ: journey from an orphan to a multifaceted regulator
of homeostasis. J. Endocrinol. 219: R13-35 [PMID:23943882]
Davenport AP et al. (2007) Apelins. In Encyclopedic Reference of Molecular Pharmacology Edited by Offermanns S, Rosenthal W: Springer: 201-206
Pitkin SL et al. (2010) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXIV. Apelin receptor nomenclature, distribution, pharmacology, and function. Pharmacol. Rev. 62: 331-42
[PMID:20605969]
Japp AG et al. (2008) The apelin-APJ system in heart failure: pathophysiologic relevance and therapeutic
potential. Biochem. Pharmacol. 75: 1882-92 [PMID:18272138]
Yang P et al. (2015) Apelin, Elabela/Toddler, and biased agonists as novel therapeutic agents in the
cardiovascular system. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. [PMID:26143239]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
GPBA receptor
HGNC, UniProt
GPBAR1, Q8TDU6
Rank order of
potency
lithocholic acid > deoxycholic acid > chenodeoxycholic acid, cholic acid (Unknown) [917, 1214]
Selective agonists
Comments: The triterpenoid natural product betulinic acid has also been reported to inhibit inflammatory signalling through the NF B pathway [1842]. Disruption of GPBA expression is reported to protect from
cholesterol gallstone formation [1951]. A new series of 5-phenoxy-1,3-dimethyl-1H-pyrazole-4-carboxamides have been reported as highly potent agonists [1138].
Further Reading
Duboc H et al. (2014) The bile acid TGR5 membrane receptor: from basic research to clinical application.
Dig Liver Dis 46: 302-12 [PMID:24411485]
Lefebvre P et al. (2009) Role of bile acids and bile acid receptors in metabolic regulation. Physiol. Rev.
89: 147-91 [PMID:19126757]
Fiorucci S et al. (2010) Bile acid-activated receptors in the treatment of dyslipidemia and related disorders.
Prog. Lipid Res. 49: 171-85 [PMID:19932133]
Lieu T et al. (2014) GPBA: a GPCR for bile acids and an emerging therapeutic target for disorders of
digestion and sensation. Br. J. Pharmacol. 171: 1156-66 [PMID:24111923]
Fiorucci S et al. (2009) Bile-acid-activated receptors: targeting TGR5 and farnesoid-X-receptor in lipid
and glucose disorders. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 30: 570-80 [PMID:19758712]
Pols TW et al. (2011) The bile acid membrane receptor TGR5 as an emerging target in metabolism and
inflammation. J. Hepatol. 54: 1263-72 [PMID:21145931]
Keitel V et al. (2012) Perspective: TGR5 (Gpbar-1) in liver physiology and disease. Clin Res Hepatol Gastroenterol 36: 412-9 [PMID:22521118]
Tiwari A et al. (2009) TGR5: an emerging bile acid G-protein-coupled receptor target for the potential
treatment of metabolic disorders. Drug Discov. Today 14: 523-30 [PMID:19429513]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Bombesin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Bombesin receptors
Overview:
Bombesin receptors (nomenclature recommended by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on bombesin
receptors, [857]) are activated by the endogenous ligands
gastrin-releasing peptide (GRP, P07492) (GRP), neuromedin B (NMB,
P08949) (NMB) and GRP-(18-27) (GRP, P07492) (previously named
neuromedin C). Bombesin is a tetradecapeptide, originally derived
from amphibians, and is an agonist at BB1 and BB2 receptors. These
1317, 1556]. A physiological role for the BB3 receptor has yet to
be fully defined although recently studies using receptor knockout
mice and newly described agonists/antagonists suggest an important role in glucose and insulin regulation, metabolic homeostasis,
feeding and other CNS behaviors and growth of normal/neoplastic
tissues [625, 1186, 1430].
Nomenclature
BB1 receptor
BB2 receptor
BB3 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
NMBR, P28336
GRPR, P30550
BRS3, P32247
Endogenous agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
D-Nal-Cys-Tyr-D-Trp-Lys-Val-Cys-Nal-NH2 (pIC50
6.26.6) [624]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
(continued)
Nomenclature
BB1 receptor
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
BB2 receptor
[D-Phe6 , Leu13 , Cpa14 , 13-14]bombesin-(6-14) (pKi 9.8) [624],
JMV641 (pIC50 9.3) [1892] Mouse,
[(3-Ph-Pr6 ), His7 ,D-Ala11 ,D-Pro13 , 13-14),Phe14] bombesin-(6-14)
(pIC50 9.2) [624, 1062],
[D-Tpi6 , Leu13 (CH2 NH)-Leu14 ]bombesin-(6-14) (pIC50 8.9)
[624], Ac-GRP-(20-26)-methylester (pIC50 8.7) [624], JMV594
(pIC50 8.78.7) [1133, 1892] Mouse
[125 I][D-Tyr6 ]bombesin-(6-13)-methyl ester (Selective Antagonist)
(pK 9.3) [1201] Mouse, [125 I][Tyr4 ]bombesin (Agonist) (pK
d
BB3 receptor
bantag-1 (pIC50 8.68.7) [659, 1321], ML-18 (pIC50
5.3) [1316]
Comments: All three subtypes may be activated by [D-Phe6 ,-Ala11 ,Phe13 ,Nle14 ]bombesin-(6-14) [1203]. [D-Tyr6 ,Apa-4Cl11 ,Phe13 ,Nle14 ]bombesin-(6-14) has more than 200-fold selectivity for BB3 receptors
over BB1 and BB2 [1202].
Further Reading
Gonzalez N et al. (2008) Bombesin-related peptides and their receptors: recent advances in their role in
physiology and disease states. Curr Opin Endocrinol Diabetes Obes 15: 58-64 [PMID:18185064]
Ladenheim EE.. (2013) Bombesin. In Handbook of Biologically Active Peptides. 2nd Revised edition. Edited
by Kastin AJ: Elsevier: 1064-1070 [ISBN: 9780123850959]
Gonzlez N et al. (2015) Bombesin receptor subtype 3 as a potential target for obesity and diabetes.
Expert Opin. Ther. Targets 1-18 [PMID:26066663]
Majumdar ID et al. (2011) Biology of mammalian bombesin-like peptides and their receptors. Curr Opin
Endocrinol Diabetes Obes 18: 68-74 [PMID:21042212]
Jensen RT et al. (2008) International Union of Pharmacology. LXVIII. Mammalian bombesin receptors:
nomenclature, distribution, pharmacology, signaling, and functions in normal and disease states.
Pharmacol. Rev. 60: 1-42 [PMID:18055507]
Moody TW et al. (2015) Neuropeptides as lung cancer growth factors. Peptides [PMID:25836991]
Jensen RT et al. (2013) Bombesin-Related Peptides. In Handbook of Biologically Active Peptides. 2nd Revised
edition. Edited by Kastin AJ: Elsevier: 1188-1196 [ISBN: 9780123850959]
Jensen RT et al. (2013) Bombesin Peptides (Cancer). In Handbook of Biologically Active Peptides. 2nd
Revised edition. Edited by Kastin AJ: Elsevier: 506-511 [ISBN: 9780123850959]
Ramos-lvarez I et al. (2015) Insights into bombesin receptors and ligands: Highlighting recent advances.
Peptides [PMID:25976083]
Roesler R et al. (2012) Gastrin-releasing peptide receptors in the central nervous system: role in brain
function and as a drug target. Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) 3: 159 [PMID:23251133]
Sun YG et al. (2009) Cellular basis of itch sensation. Science 325: 1531-4 [PMID:19661382]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Bradykinin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Bradykinin receptors
Overview: Bradykinin (or kinin) receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR subcommittee on Bradykinin (kinin) Receptors [1072]) are activated by the endogenous peptides
bradykinin (KNG1, P01042) (BK), [des-Arg9 ]bradykinin (KNG1, P01042), Lys-BK (kallidin (KNG1, P01042)), [des-Arg10 ]kallidin (KNG1, P01042), T-kinin (KNG1, P01042) (Ile-Ser-BK), [Hyp3 ]bradykinin (KNG1,
P01042) and Lys-[Hyp3 ]-bradykinin (KNG1, P01042). The variation in affinity or inactivity of B2 receptor antagonists could reflect the existence of species homologues of B2 receptors.
Nomenclature
B1 receptor
B2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
BDKRB1, P46663
[des-Arg10 ]kallidin (KNG1, P01042) > [des-Arg9 ]bradykinin (KNG1, P01042) =
BDKRB2, P30411
Selective agonists
[des-Arg10 ]kallidin (KNG1, P01042) (Selective) (pKi 9.610) [69, 104, 876]
[Sar,D-Phe8 ,des-Arg9 ]bradykinin (pK 5.7) [876]
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
B-9958 (pKi 9.210.3) [596, 1570], R-914 (pA2 8.6) [617], R-715 (pA2 8.5) [618]
[125 I]Hpp-desArg10 HOE140 (pK 10), [3 H]Lys-[des-Arg9 ]BK (Agonist) (pK 9.4),
icatibant (pKi 10.2) [39], FR173657 (pA2 8.2) [1593], anatibant (pKi 8.2) [1537]
[3 H]BK (human, mouse, rat) (Agonist) (pK 9.4) [2034] Mouse, [3 H]NPC17731
Labelled ligands
Further Reading
Campos MM et al. (2006) Non-peptide antagonists for kinin B1 receptors: new insights into their therapeutic potential for the management of inflammation and pain. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 27: 646-51
[PMID:17056130]
Paquet JL et al. (1999) Pharmacological characterization of the bradykinin B2 receptor: inter-species variability and dissociation between binding and functional responses. Br. J. Pharmacol. 126: 1083-90
[PMID:10204994]
Duchene J et al. (2009) The kinin B(1) receptor and inflammation: new therapeutic target for cardiovascular disease. Curr Opin Pharmacol 9: 125-31 [PMID:19124274]
Thornton E et al. (2010) Kinin receptor antagonists as potential neuroprotective agents in central nervous
system injury. Molecules 15: 6598-618 [PMID:20877247]
Marceau F et al. (2004) Bradykinin receptor ligands: therapeutic perspectives. Nat Rev Drug Discov 3:
845-52 [PMID:15459675]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Calcitonin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Calcitonin receptors
Overview: This receptor family comprises a group of receptors for
the calcitonin/CGRP family of peptides. The calcitonin (CT), amylin
(AMY), calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP) and adrenomedullin
(AM) receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR
Subcommittee on CGRP, AM, AMY, and CT receptors
[721, 1528]) are generated by the genes CALCR (which codes for
the CT receptor (CTR)) and CALCRL (which codes for the calcitonin
receptor-like receptor, CLR, previously known as CRLR). Their function and pharmacology are altered in the presence of RAMPs (receptor activity-modifying proteins), which are single TM domain pro-
Nomenclature
teins of ca. 130 amino acids, identified as a family of three members; RAMP1, RAMP2 and RAMP3. There are splice variants of CTR;
these in turn produce variants of the AMY receptor [1528], some
of which can be potently activated by CGRP. The endogenous agonists are the peptides calcitonin (CALCA, P01258), -CGRP (CALCA,
P06881) (formerly known as CGRP-I), -CGRP (CALCB, P10092)
(formerly known as CGRP-II), amylin (IAPP, P10997) (occasionally
called islet-amyloid polypeptide, diabetes-associated polypeptide),
adrenomedullin (ADM, P35318) and adrenomedullin 2/intermedin
(ADM2, Q7Z4H4). There are species differences in peptide se-
CT receptor
AMY1 receptor
AMY2 receptor
AMY3 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
CALCR, P30988
Subunits
Rank order of
potency
Endogenous
agonists
Labelled ligands
Poorly defined
(pKd 10)
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
CGRP receptor
AM1 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
CALCRL, Q16602
AM2 receptor
Subunits
Rank order of
potency
Endogenous
agonists
Antagonists
Selective
antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments: It is important to note that a complication with the interpretation of pharmacological studies with AMY receptors in transfected cells is that most of this work has likely used a mixed population of receptors, encompassing RAMP-coupled CTR as well as CTR
alone. This means that although in binding assays human calcitonin
(CALCA, P01258) has low affinity for 125 I-AMY binding sites, cells
transfected with CTR and RAMPs can display potent CT functional
responses. Transfection of human CTR with any RAMP can generate receptors with a high affinity for both salmon CT and AMY and
varying affinity for different antagonists [337, 718, 719]. The major human CTR splice variant (hCT(a) , which does not contain an
insert) with RAMP1 (i.e. the AMY1(a) receptor) has a high affinity
for CGRP, unlike hCT(a) -RAMP3 (i.e. AMY3(a) receptor) [337, 718].
However, the AMY receptor phenotype is RAMP-type, splice variant
and cell-line-dependent [1886]. In particular, CGRP is a more potent agonist than amylin (IAPP, P10997) at increasing cAMP at the
delta 47 hCT(a) receptor, when transfected with RAMP1 (to give the
corresponding AMY1(a) receptor) in Cos 7 cells [1543].
The ligands described represent the best available but their selectivity
is limited. For example, adrenomedullin has appreciable affinity for
CGRP receptors. CGRP can show significant cross-reactivity at AMY
receptors and AM2 receptors. Adrenomedullin 2/intermedin also has
high affinity for the AM2 receptor [779]. CGRP-(8-37) acts as an antagonist of CGRP (pKi 8) and inhibits some AM and AMY responses
(pKi 6-7). It is weak at CT receptors. Salmon CT-(8-32) is an antagonist at both AMY and CT receptors. AC187, a salmon CT analogue,
is also an antagonist at AMY and CT receptors. Human AM-(22-52)
has some selectivity towards AM receptors, but with modest potency
(pKi 7), limiting its use [720]. AM-(22-52) is slightly more effective
at AM1 than AM2 receptors but this difference is not sufficient for
this peptide to be a useful discriminator of the AM receptor subtypes.
Olcegepant shows the greatest selectivity between receptors but still
has significant affinity for AMY1 receptors [1973].
Ligand responsiveness at CT and AMY receptors can be affected by
receptor splice variation and can depend on the pathway being measured. Particularly for AMY receptors, relative potency can vary with
the type and level of RAMP present and can be influenced by other
factors such as G proteins [1324, 1886].
Gs is a prominent route for effector coupling for CLR and CTR but
other pathways (e.g. Ca2+ , ERK, Akt), and G proteins can be activated [1972]. There is evidence that CGRP-RCP (a 148 amino-acid
hydrophilic protein, ASL (P04424) is important for the coupling of
CLR to adenylyl cyclase [498].
[125 I]-Salmon CT is the most common radioligand for CT receptors
but it has high affinity for AMY receptors and is also poorly reversible.
[125 I]-Tyr0 -CGRP is widely used as a radioligand for CGRP receptors.
Some early literature distinguished between CGRP1 and CGRP2 receptors. It is now clear that the complex of CALCRL and RAMP1 represents the CGRP1 subtype and is now known simply as the CGRP receptor [721]. The CGRP2 receptor is now considered to have arisen
from the actions of CGRP at AM2 and AMY receptors. This term
should not be used [721].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Barwell J et al. (2012) Calcitonin and calcitonin receptor-like receptors: common themes with family B
GPCRs? Br. J. Pharmacol. 166: 51-65 [PMID:21649645]
Moore EL et al. (2011) Targeting a Family B GPCR/RAMP Receptor Complex: CGRP Receptor Antagonists
and Migraine. Br J Pharmacol [PMID:21871019]
Booe JM et al. (2015) Structural Basis for Receptor Activity-Modifying Protein-Dependent Selective Peptide Recognition by a G Protein-Coupled Receptor. Mol. Cell [PMID:25982113]
Poyner DR et al. (2002) International Union of Pharmacology. XXXII. The mammalian calcitonin generelated peptides, adrenomedullin, amylin, and calcitonin receptors. Pharmacol Rev. 54: 233-246
[PMID:12037140]
Hay DL et al. (2008) International Union of Pharmacology. LXIX. Status of the calcitonin gene-related
peptide subtype 2 receptor. Pharmacol. Rev. 60: 143-5 [PMID:18552275]
Hong Y et al.
(2011) The pharmacology of Adrenomedullin 2/Intermedin.
[PMID:21658025]
Br J Pharmacol
Russo AF. (2015) Calcitonin gene-related peptide (CGRP): a new target for migraine. Annu. Rev. Pharmacol. Toxicol. 55: 533-52 [PMID:25340934]
Calcium-sensing receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Calcium-sensing receptors
Overview: The calcium-sensing receptor (CaS, provisional nomenclature as recommended by NC-IUPHAR [530]) responds to extracellular calcium and magnesium in the millimolar range and to
gadolinium and some polycations in the micromolar range [229]. The sensitivity of CaS to primary agonists can be increased by aromatic L-amino acids [362] and also by elevated extracellular pH [1544] or decreased
extracellular ionic strength [1545]. This receptor bears no sequence or structural relation to the plant calcium receptor, also called CaS.
Nomenclature
CaS receptor
GPRC6 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
CASR, P41180
GPRC6A, Q5T6X5
L-phenylalanine, L-tryptophan, L-histidine > L-alanine > L-serine, L-proline, L-glutamic acid > L-aspartic acid
(not L-lysine, L-arginine, L-leucine and L-isoleucine) [362]
Gd3+ > Ca2+ > Mg2+ [229]
Allosteric modulators
AC265347 (Positive) (pEC50 7.68.1) [1160], NPS 2143 (Negative) (pIC50 7.17.4) [1377, 2087], cinacalcet
(Positive) (pEC50 7.3) [1378], calindol (Positive) (pEC50 6.5) [1499], calindol (Positive) (pKd 66.5) [930],
tecalcet (Positive) (pKd 6.5) [1379], calhex 231 (Negative) (pIC50 6.4) [1500]
Comments
2-benzylpyrrolidine derivatives of NPS 2143 are also negative allosteric modulators of the calcium sensing
receptor [2087]. etelcalcetide is a novel peptide agonist of the receptor [1975].
similar increases in PTH secretion and blood Ca2+ levels. A gainof-function mutation in the CaS gene is associated with autosomal
dominant hypocalcaemia.
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Nemeth EF et al. (2013) Calcimimetic and calcilytic drugs for treating bone and mineral-related disorders.
Best Pract. Res. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 27: 373-84 [PMID:23856266]
Breitwieser GE. (2012) Minireview: the intimate link between calcium sensing receptor trafficking and
signaling: implications for disorders of calcium homeostasis. Mol. Endocrinol. 26: 1482-95
[PMID:22745192]
Wellendorph P et al. (2004) Molecular cloning, expression, and sequence analysis of GPRC6A, a novel
family C G-protein-coupled receptor. Gene 335: 37-46 [PMID:15194188]
Brown EM. (2013) Role of the calcium-sensing receptor in extracellular calcium homeostasis. Best Pract.
Res. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 27: 333-43 [PMID:23856263]
Yarova PL et al. (2015) Calcium-sensing receptor antagonists abrogate airway hyperresponsiveness and
inflammation in allergic asthma. Sci Transl Med 7: 284ra60 [PMID:25904744]
Conigrave AD et al. (2013) Calcium-sensing receptor (CaSR): pharmacological properties and signaling
pathways. Best Pract. Res. Clin. Endocrinol. Metab. 27: 315-31 [PMID:23856262]
Magno AL et al. (2011) The calcium-sensing receptor: a molecular perspective. Endocr. Rev. 32: 3-30
[PMID:20729338]
Cannabinoid receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Cannabinoid receptors
Overview: Cannabinoid receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Cannabinoid Receptors [1494]) are activated by endogenous ligands that include Narachidonoylethanolamine (anandamide), N-homo--linolenoylethanolamine, N-docosatetra-7,10,13,16-enoylethanolamine and 2-arachidonoylglycerol. Potency determinations of endogenous agonists at these
receptors are complicated by the possibility of differential susceptibility of endogenous ligands to enzymatic conversion [35].
Nomenclature
CB1 receptor
CB2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
CNR1, P21554
CNR2, P34972
(Sub)familyselective
agonists
HU-210 (pKi 9.110.2) [509, 1733], CP55940 (pKi 8.39.2) [509, 1602, 1733], WIN55212-2
(pK 6.98.7) [509, 1730, 1733], 19 -tetrahydrocannabinol (Partial agonist) (pK 7.37.4)
HU-210 (pKi 9.39.8) [509, 1579, 1733], WIN55212-2 (pKi 8.49.6) [509, 1730,
1733], CP55940 (pK 8.69.2) [509, 1602, 1733], 19 -tetrahydrocannabinol
Selective agonists
JWH-133 (pKi 8.5) [804, 1493], L-759,633 (pKi 7.78.2) [576, 1602], AM1241
(pKi 8.1) [2088], L-759,656 (pKi 7.77.9) [576, 1602], HU-308 (pKi 7.6) [699]
Selective
antagonists
rimonabant (pKi 7.98.7) [508, 509, 1586, 1613, 1733], AM251 (pKi 8.1) [1038] Rat,
AM281 (pKi 7.9) [1037] Rat, LY320135 (pKi 6.9) [508]
[3 H]rimonabant (Antagonist) (pK 8.910) [205, 761, 889, 1498, 1588, 1742, 1873] Rat
Labelled ligands
[509, 1733]
Comments: Both CB1 and CB2 receptors may be labelled with [3 H]CP55940 (0.5 nM; [1733]) and [3 H]WIN55212-2 (2-2.4 nM; [1756, 1783]). Anandamide is also an agonist at vanilloid receptors (TRPV1)
and PPARs [1418, 2135]. There is evidence for an allosteric site on the CB1 receptor [1532]. All of the compounds listed as antagonists behave as inverse agonists in some bioassay systems [1494]. Moreover,
GPR18, GPR55 and GPR119, although showing little structural similarity to CB1 and CB2 receptors, respond to endogenous agents that are structurally similar to the endogenous cannabinoid ligands [1494].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Alexander SP et al. (2007) The complications of promiscuity: endocannabinoid action and metabolism.
Br. J. Pharmacol. 152: 602-23 [PMID:17876303]
Mechoulam R et al. (2013) The endocannabinoid system and the brain. Annu Rev Psychol 64: 21-47
[PMID:22804774]
Di Marzo V et al. (2007) Endocannabinoids and the regulation of their levels in health and disease. Curr.
Opin. Lipidol. 18: 129-40 [PMID:17353660]
OSullivan SE. (2007) Cannabinoids go nuclear: evidence for activation of peroxisome proliferatoractivated receptors. Br. J. Pharmacol. 152: 576-82 [PMID:17704824]
Howlett AC et al. (2011) Endocannabinoid tone versus constitutive activity of cannabinoid receptors. Br.
J. Pharmacol. 163: 1329-43 [PMID:21545414]
Pertwee RG et al. (2010) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXIX. Cannabinoid
receptors and their ligands: beyond CB_1 and CB_2. Pharmacol. Rev. 62: 588-631 [PMID:21079038]
McPartland JM et al. (2007) Meta-analysis of cannabinoid ligand binding affinity and receptor distribution: interspecies differences. Br. J. Pharmacol. 152: 583-93 [PMID:17641667]
Ross RA. (2011) L--lysophosphatidylinositol meets GPR55: a deadly relationship. Trends Pharmacol. Sci.
32: 265-9 [PMID:21367464]
Chemerin receptor
G protein-coupled receptors ! Chemerin receptor
Overview: The chemerin receptor (nomenclature as recommended by NC-IUPHAR [396]) is activated by chemerin [1148, 1253, 2108] and the lipid-derived, anti-inflammatory ligand resolvin E1 (RvE1),
which is the result of sequential metabolism of EPA by aspirin-modified cyclooxygenase and lipoxygenase [56, 57]. In addition, two GPCRs for resolvin D1 (RvD1) have been identified, FPR2/ALX, the lipoxin A4
receptor, and GPR32, an orphan receptor [1006].
Nomenclature
chemerin receptor
HGNC, UniProt
CMKLR1, Q99788
resolvin E1 > chemerin C-terminal peptide > 18R-HEPE > EPA [56]
Selective agonists
resolvin E1
[3 H]resolvin E1 (Agonist) (pKd 8) [56, 57]
Labelled ligands
Chemokine receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Chemokine receptors
Overview: Chemokine receptors (nomenclature as agreed by
the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Chemokine Receptors
[78, 1346, 1347]) comprise a large subfamily of 7TM proteins that
bind one or more chemokines, a large family of small cytokines typically possessing chemotactic activity for leukocytes. Chemokine re-
ceptors can be divided by function into two main groups: G proteincoupled chemokine receptors, which mediate leukocyte trafficking,
and Atypical chemokine receptors, which may signal through nonG protein-coupled mechanisms and act as chemokine scavengers to
downregulate inflammation or shape chemokine gradients [78].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
cysteines respectively. C chemokines (n= 2) have only the second and
fourth cysteines found in other chemokines. Chemokines can also be
classified by function into homeostatic and inflammatory subgroups.
Most chemokine receptors are able to bind multiple high-affinity
chemokine ligands, but the ligands for a given receptor are almost
always restricted to the same structural subclass. Most chemokines
bind to more than one receptor subtype. Receptors for inflammatory
chemokines are typically highly promiscuous with regard to ligand
specificity, and may lack a selective endogenous ligand. G protein-
Nomenclature
CCR1
CCR2
CCR3
HGNC, UniProt
CCR1, P32246
CCR2, P41597
CCR3, P51677
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Endogenous antagonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Antibodies
Labelled ligands
(Agonist)
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
CCR4
CCR5
HGNC, UniProt
CCR4, P51679
CCR5, P51681
Endogenous agonists
CCL22 (CCL22, O00626) (Selective) (pIC50 9.2) [822], CCL17 (CCL17, Q92583)
(Selective) (pIC50 8.7) [822]
CCL5 (CCL5, P13501) (pKi 9.29.7) [75, 1364, 1611], CCL4 (CCL4, P13236)
(Selective) (pKi 9.49.6) [1364, 1611], CCL8 (CCL8, P80075) (pKi 9.3) [1611], CCL3
(CCL3, P10147) (pKi 88.9) [1364, 1611, 2134], CCL11 (CCL11, P51671) (pIC50 7.7)
[157], CCL2 (CCL2, P13500) (pKi 7.5) [1364], CCL14 (CCL14, Q16627) (pKi 7.2)
[1364], CCL16 (CCL16, O15467)
Agonists
vMIP-III
R5-HIV-1 gp120
Endogenous antagonists
Antagonists
vicriviroc (pKi 9.1) [1805], ancriviroc (pKi 7.88.7) [1173, 1455, 1805]
Selective antagonists
E913 (pIC50 8.7) [1174], aplaviroc (pKi 8.5) [1173], maraviroc (pIC50 8.1) [1364],
TAK-779 (pKi 7.5) [1173], MRK-1 [1023] Rat
Antibodies
[125 I]CCL4 (human) (Agonist) (pKd 9.6) [1364], [125 I]CCL3 (human) (Agonist),
[125 I]CCL5 (human) (Agonist), [125 I]CCL8 (human) (Agonist)
Labelled ligands
Nomenclature
CCR6
CCR7
CCR8
CCR9
CCR10
HGNC, UniProt
CCR6, P51684
CCR7, P32248
CCR8, P51685
CCR9, P51686
CCR10, P46092
Endogenous
agonists
Agonists
Selective
antagonists
Labelled ligands
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
CXCR1
CXCR2
HGNC, UniProt
CXCR1, P25024
CXCR2, P25025
CXCR3, P49682
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Endogenous antagonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Allosteric modulators
Labelled ligands
Comments
CXCR3
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
CXCR4
CXCR5
HGNC, UniProt
CXCR4, P61073
CXCR5, P32302
CXCR6, O00574
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Endogenous antagonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Allosteric modulators
Labelled ligands
Comments
Nomenclature
CXCR6
CX3 CR1
CX3CR1, P49238
XCR1
ACKR1
ACKR2
HGNC, UniProt
XCR1, P46094
ACKR1, Q16570
ACKR2, O00590
Endogenous ligands
Endogenous agonists
Labelled ligands
Comments
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
ACKR3
ACKR4
CCRL2
HGNC, UniProt
ACKR3, P25106
ACKR4, Q9NPB9
CCRL2, O00421
Endogenous ligands
Endogenous agonists
Further Reading
Bachelerie F et al. (2015) An atypical addition to the chemokine receptor nomenclature: IUPHAR Review
"15". Br. J. Pharmacol. [PMID:25958743]
Muoz LM et al. (2011) Receptor oligomerization: a pivotal mechanism for regulating chemokine function. Pharmacol. Ther. 131: 351-8 [PMID:21600920]
Koelink PJ et al. (2012) Targeting chemokine receptors in chronic inflammatory diseases: an extensive
review. Pharmacol. Ther. 133: 1-18 [PMID:21839114]
Scholten DJ et al. (2012) Pharmacological modulation of chemokine receptor function. Br. J. Pharmacol.
165: 1617-43 [PMID:21699506]
Murphy PM. (2002) International Union of Pharmacology. XXX. Update on chemokine receptor nomenclature. Pharmacol. Rev. 54: 227-9 [PMID:12037138]
Szpakowska M et al. (2012) Function, diversity and therapeutic potential of the N-terminal domain of
human chemokine receptors. Biochem. Pharmacol. 84: 1366-80 [PMID:22935450]
Murphy PM et al. (2000) International Union of Pharmacology. XXII. Nomenclature for chemokine receptors. Pharmacol. Rev. 52: 145-176 [PMID:10699158]
White GE et al. (2013) CC chemokine receptors and chronic inflammationtherapeutic opportunities and
pharmacological challenges. Pharmacol. Rev. 65: 47-89 [PMID:23300131]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Cholecystokinin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Cholecystokinin receptors
Overview:
Cholecystokinin receptors (nomenclature as
agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on CCK receptors [1403]) are activated by the endogenous peptides
cholecystokinin-8 (CCK-8 (CCK, P06307)), CCK-33 (CCK, P06307),
CCK-58 (CCK, P06307) and gastrin (gastrin-17 (GAST, P01350)).
Nomenclature
There are only two distinct subtypes of CCK receptors, CCK1 and
CCK2 receptors [992, 1986], with some alternatively spliced forms
most often identified in neoplastic cells. The CCK receptor subtypes
are distinguished by their peptide selectivity, with the CCK1 receptor
requiring the carboxyl-terminal heptapeptide-amide that includes a
sulfated tyrosine for high affinity and potency, while the CCK2 receptor requires only the carboxyl-terminal tetrapeptide shared by both
CCK and gastrin peptides. These receptors have characteristic and
distinct distributions, with both present in both the central nervous
system and peripheral tissues.
CCK1 receptor
CCKAR, P32238
CCK2 receptor
CCKBR, P32239
Endogenous agonists
Selective agonists
A-71623 (pIC50 8.4) [63] Rat, JMV180 (pIC50 8.3) [926], GW-5823 (pIC50 7.6)
[737]
RB-400 (pKi 9.1) [123] Rat, PBC-264 (pIC50 9.1) [844] Rat
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
devazepide (pIC50 9.7) [805] Rat, T-0632 (pIC50 9.6) [1861] Rat, PD-140548
(pIC50 8.6) [1748] Rat, lorglumide (pIC50 6.78.2) [805, 834] Rat
Labelled ligands
YF-476 (pIC50 9.7) [196, 1854], GV150013 (pIC50 9.4) [1930], L-740093 (pIC50
9.2) [1398], YM-022 (pIC50 9.2) [1398], JNJ-26070109 (pIC50 8.5) [1336],
L-365260 (pIC50 8.4) [1071], RP73870 (pIC50 8) [1115] Rat, LY262691 (pIC50
7.5) [1561] Rat
[3 H]PD140376 (Antagonist) (pK 9.710) [809] Guinea pig, [125 I]PD142308
HGNC, UniProt
Comments: While a cancer-specific CCK receptor has been postulated to exist, which also might be responsive to incompletely processed forms of CCK (Gly-extended forms), this has never been isolated. An alternatively spliced form of the CCK2 receptor in which
intron 4 is retained, adding 69 amino acids to the intracellular loop 3
50
9) [1527]
exon 4 resulting in long (452 amino acids) and short (447 amino
acids) forms of the receptor differing by five residues in ICL3, however, no clear functional differences have been observed.
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Cawston EE et al. (2010) Therapeutic potential for novel drugs targeting the type 1 cholecystokinin
receptor. Br. J. Pharmacol. 159: 1009-21 [PMID:19922535]
Dockray GJ. (2009) Cholecystokinin and gut-brain signalling. Regul. Pept. 155: 6-10 [PMID:19345244]
Physiol.
Rev.
86:
805-47
Miller LJ et al. (2008) Structural basis of cholecystokinin receptor binding and regulation. Pharmacol.
Ther. 119: 83-95 [PMID:18558433]
Overview: Receptors of the Class Frizzled (FZD, nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR subcommittee on the
Class Frizzled GPCRs [1676]), are GPCRs originally identified
inDrosophila [285], which are highly conserved across species. FZDs
are activated by WNTs, which are cysteine-rich lipoglycoproteins
with fundamental functions in ontogeny and tissue homeostatis.
FZD signalling was initially divided into two pathways, being either dependent on the accumulation of the transcription regulator -catenin (CTNNB1, P35222) or being -catenin-independent
(often referred to as canonical vs. non-canonical WNT/FZD signalling, respectively). WNT stimulation of FZDs can, in cooperation
Nomenclature
FZD1
HGNC, UniProt
FZD1, Q9UP38
Nomenclature
FZD6
HGNC, UniProt
FZD6, O60353
with the low density lipoprotein receptors LRP5 (O75197) and LRP6
(O75581), lead to the inhibition of a constitutively active destruction complex, which results in the accumulation of -catenin and
subsequently its translocation to the nucleus. -Catenin, in turn,
modifies gene transcription by interacting with TCF/LEF transcription
factors. -Catenin-independent FZD signalling is far more complex
with regard to the diversity of the activated pathways. WNT/FZD
signalling can lead to the activation of pertussis toxin-sensitive heterotrimeric G proteins [939], the elevation of intracellular calcium
[1757], activation of cGMP-specific PDE6 [17] and elevation of cAMP
as well as RAC-1, JNK, Rho and Rho kinase signalling [695]. Fur-
FZD2
FZD2, Q14332
FZD7
FZD7, O75084
FZD3
FZD3, Q9NPG1
FZD8
FZD8, Q9H461
FZD4
FZD4, Q9ULV1
FZD9
FZD9, O00144
FZD5
FZD5, Q13467
FZD10
FZD10, Q9ULW2
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
SMO
HGNC, UniProt
SMO, Q99835
Antagonists
saridegib (pIC50 8.9) [1904], glasdegib (pIC50 8.3) [1342], erismodegib (pKi 8.2) [1979]
Selective antagonists
Further Reading
Dijksterhuis JP et al. (2013) WNT/Frizzled signaling: receptor-ligand selectivity with focus on FZD-G protein signaling and its physiological relevance. Br J Pharmacol [PMID:24032637]
Schuijers J et al. (2012) Adult mammalian stem cells: the role of Wnt, Lgr5 and R-spondins. EMBO J. 31:
2685-96 [PMID:22617424]
King TD et al. (2012) The Wnt/-catenin signaling pathway: a potential therapeutic target in the treatment of triple negative breast cancer. J. Cell. Biochem. 113: 13-8 [PMID:21898546]
Schulte G. (2010) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXX. The class Frizzled receptors. Pharmacol. Rev. 62: 632-67 [PMID:21079039]
King TD et al. (2012) Frizzled7 as an emerging target for cancer therapy. Cell. Signal. 24: 846-51
[PMID:22182510]
Schulte G et al. (2010) beta-Arrestins - scaffolds and signalling elements essential for WNT/Frizzled signalling pathways? Br. J. Pharmacol. 159: 1051-8 [PMID:19888962]
Koval A et al. (2011) Yellow submarine of the Wnt/Frizzled signaling: submerging from the G protein
harbor to the targets. Biochem. Pharmacol. 82: 1311-9 [PMID:21689640]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
C3a receptor
HGNC, UniProt
C3AR1, Q16581
C5a1 receptor
C5AR1, P21730
C5a2 receptor
C5AR2, Q9P296
C5a (C5, P01031), C5a des-Arg (C5) > C3a (C3, P01024)
[41]
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
N-methyl-Phe-Lys-Pro-D-Cha-Cha-D-Arg-CO2H (pIC50
7.6) [916, 989]
Antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments
displaced with the rank order C5a des-Arg (C5)> C5a (C5, P01031)
[257, 1440] while there is controversy over the ability of C3a (C3,
P01024) and C3a des Arg (C3, P01024) to compete [778, 894, 895,
1440]. C5a2 appears to lack G protein signalling and has been
termed a decoy receptor [1684]. However, C5a2 does recruit arrestin after ligand binding, which might provide a signaling pathway
for this receptor [89, 1937], and forms heteromers with C5a1 . C5a,
but not C5a-des Arg, induces upregulation of heteromer formation
between complement C5a receptors C5aR and C5L2 [380]. There
are also reports of pro-inflammatory activity of C5a2 , mediated by
HMGB1, but the signaling pathway that underlies this is currently
unclear (reviewed in [1095]).
Further Reading
Hajishengallis G. (2010) Complement and periodontitis.
[PMID:20599785]
80: 1992-2001
Monk PN et al. (2007) Function, structure and therapeutic potential of complement C5a receptors. Br. J.
Pharmacol. 152: 429-48 [PMID:17603557]
Klos A et al. (2013) International Union of Pharmacology. LXXXVII. Complement peptide C5a, C4a, and
C3a receptors. Pharmacol. Rev. 65: 500-43 [PMID:23383423]
Sacks SH. (2010) Complement fragments C3a and C5a: the salt and pepper of the immune response.
Eur. J. Immunol. 40: 668-70 [PMID:20186746]
Biochem.
Pharmacol.
Manthey HD et al. (2009) Complement component 5a (C5a). Int. J. Biochem. Cell Biol. 41: 2114-7
[PMID:19464229]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
HGNC, UniProt
CRF1 receptor
CRHR1, P34998
CRF2 receptor
CRHR2, Q13324
Endogenous agonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
CP 154,526 (pIC50 9.310.4) [1153] Rat, DMP696 (pKi 8.39) [726], NBI27914
(pKi 8.39) [298], R121919 (pKi 8.39) [2133], antalarmin (pKi 8.39) [2001],
CP376395 (pIC50 8.3) [307] Rat, CRA1000 (pIC50 6.47.1) [284]
antisauvagine (pKd 8.89.6) [394], K41498 (pKi 9.2) [1048], K31440 (pKi 8.78.8)
[1622]
Comments: A CRF binding protein has been identified (CRHBP, P24387) to which both corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH, P06850) and urocortin 1 (UCN, P55089) bind with high affinities, which has been
suggested to bind and inactivate circulating corticotrophin-releasing hormone (CRH, P06850) [1489].
Further Reading
Grammatopoulos DK. (2012) Insights into mechanisms of corticotropin-releasing hormone receptor signal transduction. Br. J. Pharmacol. 166: 85-97 [PMID:21883143]
Valentino RJ et al. (2013) Sex-biased stress signaling: the corticotropin-releasing factor receptor as a
model. Mol. Pharmacol. 83: 737-45 [PMID:23239826]
Gysling K. (2012) Relevance of both type-1 and type-2 corticotropin releasing factor receptors in stressinduced relapse to cocaine seeking behaviour. Biochem. Pharmacol. 83: 1-5 [PMID:21843515]
Zhu H et al. (2011) Corticotropin-releasing factor family and its receptors: pro-inflammatory or antiinflammatory targets in the periphery? Inflamm. Res. 60: 715-21 [PMID:21476084]
Hauger RL et al. (2003) International Union of Pharmacology. XXXVI. Current status of the nomenclature for receptors for corticotropin-releasing factor and their ligands. Pharmacol Rev. 55: 21-26
[PMID:12615952]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Dopamine receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Dopamine receptors
Overview: Dopamine receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Dopamine Receptors [1677]) are commonly divided into D1 -like (D1 and D5 ) and D2 -like (D2 ,
D3 and D4 ) families, where the endogenous agonist is dopamine.
Nomenclature
D1 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
DRD1, P21728
D2 receptor
DRD2, P14416
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
rotigotine (pKi 10.2) [424], cabergoline (Partial agonist) (pKi 99.2) [1279],
aripiprazole (Partial agonist) (pKi 9.1) [2111], bromocriptine (pKi 7.38.3) [545,
1279, 1653], MLS1547 (Biased agonist) (pKi 8.2) [544], ropinirole (pKi 8.1) [732],
apomorphine (Partial agonist) (pKi 5.77.5) [245, 545, 1279, 1653, 1776],
pramipexole (pKi 5.17.4) [1273, 1653], benzquinamide (pKi 5.4) [643]
(Sub)family-selective
agonists
A68930 (pEC50 6.8) [1381], SKF-38393 (Partial agonist) (pKi 6.26.8) [1823,
1884]
Selective agonists
SKF-83959 (Biased agonist) (pEC50 9.7) [364], SKF-81297 (pKi 8.7) [46]
Rat
Antagonists
blonanserin (pKi 9.9) [1421], pipotiazine (pKi 9.7) [1777], perphenazine (pKi
8.99.6) [1008, 1691], risperidone (pKi 9.4) [60], perospirone (pKi 9.2) [1692],
trifluoperazine (pKi 8.99) [1008, 1693], asenapine (pKi 8.9) [1711], sertindole
(pKi 88.9) [986, 1008, 1691], fluphenazine (pKi 8.8) [1647], flupentixol (pKi 8.8)
[545], pimozide (pKi 78.8) [545, 1776], olanzapine (pKi 8.7) [60], mesoridazine
(pKi 8.7) [326], ziprasidone (pKi 8.6) [60], prochlorperazine (pKi 8.4) [68],
loxapine (pKi 7.98.3) [1008, 1693], (-)-sulpiride (pKi 6.38) [545, 1776, 1860],
amisulpride (pKi 7.98) [1195, 1776], metoclopramide (pKi 7.5) [1221] Mouse,
quetiapine (pKi 7.2) [60], trans-flupenthixol (pKi 6.9) [545], clozapine (pKi
5.86.9) [545, 1164, 1711, 1776, 1860], promazine (pKi 6.5) [246]
(Sub)family-selective
antagonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
L-741,626 (pKi 7.98.5) [655, 1020], domperidone (pKi 7.98.4) [545, 1776],
raclopride (pKi 8) [1281], ML321 (pKi 7) [2058, 2059]
[3 H]spiperone (Antagonist) (pK 10.2) [239, 767, 2125] Rat
Labelled ligands
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
HGNC, UniProt
D3 receptor
DRD3, P35462
D4 receptor
DRD4, P21917
D5 receptor
DRD5, P21918
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
(Sub)family-selective
agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
(Sub)family-selective
antagonists
Selective antagonists
Selective allosteric
modulators
Labelled ligands
Labelled ligands
9) [558]
[3 H]7-OH-DPAT has similar affinity for D2 and D3 receptors, but labels only D3 receptors in the absence of divalent cations. The pharmacological profile of the D5 receptor is similar to, yet distinct from,
that of the D1 receptor. The splice variants of the D2 receptor are
commonly termed D2S and D2L (short and long). The DRD4 gene
encoding the D4 receptor is highly polymorphic in humans, with
allelic variations of the protein from amino acid 387 to 515.
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Beaulieu JM et al. (2015) Dopamine receptors - IUPHAR Review 13. Br. J. Pharmacol. 172: 1-23
[PMID:25671228]
Ptcek R et al. (2011) Dopamine D4 receptor gene DRD4 and its association with psychiatric disorders.
Med. Sci. Monit. 17: RA215-20 [PMID:21873960]
Beaulieu JM et al. (2011) The physiology, signaling, and pharmacology of dopamine receptors. Pharmacol. Rev. 63: 182-217 [PMID:21303898]
Schwartz J-C et al.. (1998) Dopamine Receptors. In The IUPHAR Compendium of Receptor Characterization
and Classification Edited by Girdlestone D: IUPHAR Media: 141-151
Cumming P. (2011) Absolute abundances and affinity states of dopamine receptors in mammalian brain:
A review. Synapse 65: 892-909 [PMID:21308799]
Undieh AS. (2010) Pharmacology of signaling induced by dopamine D(1)-like receptor activation. Pharmacol. Ther. 128: 37-60 [PMID:20547182]
Maggio R et al. (2010) Dopamine D2-D3 receptor heteromers: pharmacological properties and therapeutic significance. Curr Opin Pharmacol 10: 100-7 [PMID:19896900]
Endothelin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Endothelin receptors
Overview: Endothelin receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Endothelin Receptors [395]) are activated by the endogenous 21 amino-acid peptides endothelins
1-3 (endothelin-1 (EDN1, P05305), endothelin-2 (EDN2, P20800) and endothelin-3 (EDN3, P14138)).
Nomenclature
ETA receptor
HGNC, UniProt
EDNRA, P25101
ETB receptor
EDNRB, P24530
Selective agonists
sarafotoxin S6c (pKd 8.89.8) [1016, 1616], BQ 3020 (pKi 9.7) [1576],
[Ala1,3,11,15 ]ET-1 (pK 8.79.2) [1300], IRL 1620 (pK 8.7) [1991]
(Sub)family-selective
antagonists
SB209670 (pKB 9.4) [474] Rat, TAK 044 (pA2 8.4) [1993] Rat, bosentan (pA2
7.2) [354] Rat
SB209670 (pKB 9.4) [474] Rat, TAK 044 (pA2 8.4) [1993] Rat, bosentan (pKi
7.1) [1349]
Selective antagonists
A192621 (pKd 8.1) [2145], BQ788 (pKd 7.98) [1616], IRL 2500 (pKd 7.2)
[1616], Ro 46-8443 (pIC50 7.2) [209]
Labelled ligands
[125 I]IRL1620 (Agonist) (pKd 9.910.1) [1362], [125 I]BQ3020 (Agonist) (pKd
8.310) [702, 1300, 1495], [125 I][Ala1,3,11,15 ]ET-1 (Agonist) (pK 9.7) [1300]
d
Comments: Splice variants of the ETA receptor have been identified in rat pituitary cells; one of these, ETA R-C13, appeared to show loss of function with comparable plasma membrane expression to wild type
receptor [713]. Subtypes of the ETB receptor have been proposed, although gene disruption studies in mice suggest that only a single gene product exists [1295].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Handb Exp Pharmacol 218: 199-227
Ling L et al. (2013) Endothelin-2, the forgotten isoform: emerging role in the cardiovascular system,
ovarian development, immunology and cancer. Br. J. Pharmacol. 168: 283-95 [PMID:22118774]
Davenport AP. (2002) International Union of Pharmacology. XXIX. Update on endothelin receptornomenclature. Pharmacol. Rev. 54: 219-226 [PMID:12037137]
Maguire JJ et al. (2014) Endothelin@25 - new agonists, antagonists, inhibitors and emerging research
frontiers: IUPHAR Review 12. Br. J. Pharmacol. 171: 5555-72 [PMID:25131455]
Dhaun N et al. (2012) Endothelin-1 and the kidneybeyond BP. Br. J. Pharmacol. 167: 720-31
[PMID:22670597]
Maguire JJ et al. (2015) Endothelin Receptors and Their Antagonists. Semin. Nephrol. 35: 125-136
[PMID:25966344]
Kohan DE et al. (2012) Clinical trials with endothelin receptor antagonists: what went wrong and where
can we improve? Life Sci. 91: 528-39 [PMID:22967485]
Said N et al. (2012) Permissive role of endothelin receptors in tumor metastasis. Life Sci. 91: 522-7
[PMID:22846215]
Kohan DE et al. (2011) Regulation of blood pressure and salt homeostasis by endothelin. Physiol. Rev.
91: 1-77 [PMID:21248162]
Nomenclature
GPER
HGNC, UniProt
GPER1, Q99527
Selective agonists
G1 (pKi 8) [176]
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments: Antagonists at the nuclear estrogen receptor, such as fulvestrant and tamoxifen [515], as well as the flavonoid phytoestrogens genistein and quercetin [1177], are agonists at GPER receptors.
Further Reading
Barton M et al. (2015) Emerging roles of GPER in diabetes and atherosclerosis. Trends Endocrinol. Metab.
26: 185-92 [PMID:25767029]
Han G et al. (2013) GPER: a novel target for non-genomic estrogen action in the cardiovascular system.
Pharmacol. Res. 71: 53-60 [PMID:23466742]
Lappano R et al. (2014) GPER Function in Breast Cancer: An Overview. Front Endocrinol (Lausanne) 5: 66
[PMID:24834064]
Prossnitz ER et al. (2015) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. XCVII. G ProteinCoupled Estrogen Receptor and Its Pharmacologic Modulators. Pharmacol. Rev. 67: 505-40
[PMID:26023144]
Prossnitz ER et al. (2014) Estrogen biology: new insights into GPER function and clinical opportunities.
Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 389: 71-83 [PMID:24530924]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Formylpeptide receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Formylpeptide receptors
Overview: The formylpeptide receptors (nomenclature agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on the formyl peptide receptor family [2092]) respond to exogenous ligands such as the
bacterial product fMet-Leu-Phe (fMLP) and endogenous ligands such as annexin I (ANXA1, P04083) , cathepsin G (CTSG, P08311), amyloid 42, serum amyloid A and spinorphin, derived from -haemoglobin (HBB,
P68871).
Nomenclature
FPR1
FPR2/ALX
FPR3
HGNC, UniProt
FPR1, P21462
FPR2, P25090
FPR3, P25089
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
ATLa2 [662]
Endogenous antagonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments
Comments: Note that the data for FPR2/ALX are also reproduced on the leukotriene receptor page.
Further Reading
Dorward DA et al. (2015) The Role of Formylated Peptides and Formyl Peptide Receptor 1 in Governing
Neutrophil Function during Acute Inflammation. Am. J. Pathol. 185: 1172-1184 [PMID:25791526]
Dufton N et al. (2010) Therapeutic anti-inflammatory potential of formyl-peptide receptor agonists.
Pharmacol. Ther. 127: 175-88 [PMID:20546777]
Liu M et al. (2012) G protein-coupled receptor FPR1 as a pharmacologic target in inflammation and
human glioblastoma. Int. Immunopharmacol. 14: 283-8 [PMID:22863814]
Rabiet MJ et al. (2011) N-formyl peptide receptor 3 (FPR3) departs from the homologous FPR2/ALX receptor with regard to the major processes governing chemoattractant receptor regulation, expression
at the cell surface, and phosphorylation. J. Biol. Chem. 286: 26718-31 [PMID:21543323]
Yazid S et al. (2012) Anti-inflammatory drugs, eicosanoids and the annexin A1/FPR2 anti-inflammatory
system. Prostaglandins Other Lipid Mediat. 98: 94-100 [PMID:22123264]
Ye RD et al. (2009) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXIII. Nomenclature for the
formyl peptide receptor (FPR) family. Pharmacol. Rev. 61: 119-61 [PMID:19498085]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
FFA1 receptor
FFA2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
FFAR1, O14842
Endogenous agonists
docosahexaenoic acid
(pEC50 5.46) [218, 833]
Agonists
1399] and FFA3 [226, 1057] receptors. In addition, thiazolidinedione PPAR agonists such as rosiglitazone activate FFA1 (pEC50 5.2;
[999, 1768, 1802]) and small molecule allosteric modulators, such
as 4-CMTB, have recently been characterised for FFA2 [801, 1070,
1769].
FFA3 receptor
FFA4 receptor
GPR42
FFAR2, O15552
FFAR3, O14843
FFAR4, Q5NUL3
GPR42, O15529
(Sub)family-selective agonists
Selective agonists
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
(continued)
Nomenclature
FFA1 receptor
FFA2 receptor
FFA3 receptor
FFA4 receptor
GPR42
Selective antagonists
Comments
Beta-hydroxybutyrate has
been reported to antagonise
FFA3 responses to short chain
fatty acids [951]. A range of
FFA3 selective molecules with
agonist and antagonist
properties, but which bind at
sites distinct from the short
chain fatty acid binding site,
have recently been described
[799].
Comments: Short (361 amino acids) and long (377 amino acids)
splice variants of human FFA4 have been reported [1318], which differ by a 16 amino acid insertion in intracellular loop 3, and exhibit
differences in intracellular signalling properties in recombinant sys-
tems [1996]. The long FFA4 splice variant has not been identified in
other primates or rodents to date [757, 1318].
GPR42 was originally described as a pseudogene within the family
(ENSFM00250000002583), but the recent discovery of several poly-
Further Reading
Mancini AD et al. (2013) The fatty acid receptor FFA1/GPR40 a decade later: how much do we know?
Trends Endocrinol. Metab. 24: 398-407 [PMID:23631851]
Maslowski KM et al. (2011) Diet, gut microbiota and immune responses. Nat. Immunol. 12: 5-9
[PMID:21169997]
Milligan G et al. (2009) Agonism and allosterism: the pharmacology of the free fatty acid receptors FFA2
and FFA3. Br. J. Pharmacol. 158: 146-53 [PMID:19719777]
Reimann F et al. (2012) G-protein-coupled receptors in intestinal chemosensation. Cell Metab. 15: 42131 [PMID:22482725]
Stoddart LA et al. (2008) International Union of Pharmacology. LXXI. Free fatty acid receptors
FFA1, -2, and -3: pharmacology and pathophysiological functions. Pharmacol. Rev. 60: 405-17
[PMID:19047536]
Talukdar S et al. (2011) Targeting GPR120 and other fatty acid-sensing GPCRs ameliorates insulin resistance and inflammatory diseases. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 32: 543-50 [PMID:21663979]
Watterson KR et al. (2014) Treatment of type 2 diabetes by free Fatty Acid receptor agonists. Front
Endocrinol (Lausanne) 5: 137 [PMID:25221541]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
GABAB receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! GABAB receptors
Nomenclature
bours the GABA (orthosteric)-binding site within an extracellular domain (ECD) venus flytrap module (VTM), whereas the GABAB2 subunit mediates G protein-coupled signalling [194, 591, 592, 1506].
The two subunits interact by direct allosteric coupling [1313], such
that GABAB2 increases the affinity of GABAB1 for agonists and reciprocally GABAB1 facilitates the coupling of GABAB2 to G proteins
[591, 1013, 1506]. GABAB1 and GABAB2 subunits assemble in a
1:1 stoichiometry by means of a coiled-coil interaction between helices within their carboxy-termini that masks an endoplasmic reticulum retention motif (RXRR) within the GABAB1 subunit but other
domains of the proteins also contribute to their heteromerization
[144, 243, 1506]. Recent evidence indicates that higher order assemblies of GABAB receptor comprising dimers of heterodimers occur in recombinant expression systems and in vivo and that such
complexes exhibit negative functional cooperativity between heterodimers [361, 1505]. Adding further complexity, KCTD (potassium channel tetramerization proteins) 8, 12, 12b and 16 associate
as tetramers with the carboxy terminus of the GABAB2 subunit to impart altered signalling kinetics and agonist potency to the receptor
Subunits
GABAB receptor
kcdt12b (Accessory protein), KCTD16 (Accessory protein), KCTD12 (Accessory protein), GABAB2 , GABAB1 , KCTD8 (Accessory protein)
Agonists
CGP 44532 (pIC50 8.6) [551] Rat, (-)-baclofen (pIC50 8.5) [551] Rat, 3-APPA (pKi 5.27.2) [762], baclofen (pKi 4.36.2) [762, 2041], 3-APMPA (pKi 5.1) [2041]
Antagonists
CGP 62349 (pKi 8.58.9) [762, 2041], CGP 55845 (pKi 7.8) [2041], SCH 50911 (pKi 5.56) [762, 2041], CGP 35348 (pKi 4.4) [2041], 2-hydroxy-saclofen (pIC50 4.1) [914] Rat
[3 H]CGP 54626 (Antagonist) (pKi 9.1) [879] Rat, [3 H]CGP 62349 (Antagonist) (pKd 9.1) [922] Rat, [125 I]CGP 64213 (Antagonist) (pKd 9) [563] Rat, [125 I]CGP 71872
(Antagonist) (pK 9) [914] Rat, [3 H](R)-(-)-baclofen (Agonist)
Labelled ligands
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Subunits
Nomenclature
HGNC, UniProt
Comments: Potencies of agonists and antagonists listed in the table, quantified as IC50 values for the inhibition of [3 H]CGP27492
binding to rat cerebral cortex membranes, are from [194, 550, 551].
Radioligand KD values relate to binding to rat brain membranes.
CGP 71872 is a photoaffinity ligand for the GABAB1 subunit [122].
CGP27492 (3-APPA), CGP35024 (3-APMPA) and CGP 44532 act as
antagonists at human GABAA 1 receptors, with potencies in the low
micromolar range [550]. In addition to the ligands listed in the table,
Ca2+ binds to the VTM of the GABAB1 subunit to act as a positive
GABAB1
GABBR1, Q9UBS5
GABAB2
GABBR2, O75899
Further Reading
Bettler B et al. (2004) Molecular structure and physiological functions of GABA(B) receptors. Physiol. Rev.
84: 835-67 [PMID:15269338]
Gassmann M et al. (2012) Regulation of neuronal GABA(B) receptor functions by subunit composition.
Nat. Rev. Neurosci. 13: 380-94 [PMID:22595784]
Bowery NG et al. (2002) International Union of Pharmacology. XXXIII. Mammalian gammaaminobutyricacid(B) receptors: structure and function.
Pharmacol Rev.
54: 247-264
[PMID:12037141]
Marshall FH. (2005) Is the GABA B heterodimer a good drug target? J. Mol. Neurosci. 26: 169-76
[PMID:16012190]
Rondard P et al. (2011) The complexity of their activation mechanism opens new possibilities for the
modulation of mGlu and GABAB class C G protein-coupled receptors. Neuropharmacology 60: 82-92
[PMID:20713070]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Galanin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Galanin receptors
Overview: Galanin receptors (provisional nomenclature as recommended by NC-IUPHAR [530]) are activated by the endogenous peptides galanin (GAL, P22466) and galanin-like peptide (GALP,
Q9UBC7). Human galanin (GAL, P22466) is a 30 amino-acid non-amidated peptide [499]; in other species, it is 29 amino acids long and C-terminally amidated. Amino acids 1-14 of galanin are highly conserved in
mammals, birds, reptiles, amphibia and fish. Shorter peptide species (e.g. human galanin-1-19 [139] and porcine galanin-5-29 [1740]) and N-terminally extended forms (e.g. N-terminally seven and nine residue
elongated forms of porcine galanin [140, 1740]) have been reported.
Nomenclature
GAL1 receptor
GALR1, P47211
GAL2 receptor
GALR2, O43603
GAL3 receptor
GALR3, O60755
Agonists
Selective agonists
Selective antagonists
2,3-dihydro-1,4-dithiin-1,1,4,4-tetroxide (pIC50
5.6) [1688]
Selective allosteric
modulators
Labelled ligands
Comments
HGNC, UniProt
gastric smooth muscle cells [658, 2054]. Additional galanin receptor subtypes are also suggested from studies with chimeric peptides
(e.g. M15, M35 and M40), which act as antagonists in functional
assays in the cardiovascular system [1924], spinal cord [2024], locus coeruleus, hippocampus [100] and hypothalamus [101, 1078],
but exhibit agonist activity at some peripheral sites [101, 658].
The chimeric peptides M15, M32, M35, M40 and C7 are agonists at GAL1 receptors expressed endogenously in Bowes human
melanoma cells [1433], and at heterologously expressed recombinant GAL1 , GAL2 and GAL3 receptors [525, 1765, 1766]. Recent
studies have described the synthesis of a series of novel, systemicallyactive, galanin analogues, with modest preferential binding at the
GAL2 receptor. Specific chemical modifications to the galanin backbone increased brain levels of these peptides after i.v. injection and
several of these peptides exerted a potent antidepressant-like effect
in mouse models of depression [1623].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Foord SM et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. XLVI. G protein-coupled receptor list. Pharmacol Rev 57: 279-288 [PMID:15914470]
Lawrence C et al. (2011) Galanin-like peptide (GALP) is a hypothalamic regulator of energy homeostasis
and reproduction. Front Neuroendocrinol 32: 1-9 [PMID:20558195]
Lang R et al. (2015) Physiology, signaling, and pharmacology of galanin peptides and receptors: three
decades of emerging diversity. Pharmacol. Rev. 67: 118-75 [PMID:25428932]
Lang R et al. (2011) The galanin peptide family in inflammation. Neuropeptides 45: 1-8 [PMID:21087790]
Ghrelin receptor
G protein-coupled receptors ! Ghrelin receptor
Overview: The ghrelin receptor (nomenclature as agreed by
the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee for the Ghrelin receptor
[397]) is activated by a 28 amino-acid peptide originally isolated
from rat stomach, where it is cleaved from a 117 amino-acid precursor (GHRL, Q9UBU3). The human gene encoding the precursor peptide has 83% sequence homology to rat prepro-ghrelin, although
the mature peptides from rat and human differ by only two amino
acids [1222]. Alternative splicing results in the formation of a second
peptide, [des-Gln14 ]ghrelin (GHRL, Q9UBU3) with equipotent biological activity [783]. A unique post-translational modification (octanoylation of Ser3 , catalysed by ghrelin O-acyltransferase (MBOAT4,
Q96T53) [2082] occurs in both peptides, essential for full activity in
binding to ghrelin receptors in the hypothalamus and pituitary, and
for the release of growth hormone from the pituitary [983]. Structure activity studies showed the first five N-terminal amino acids to
be the minimum required for binding [116], and receptor mutagenesis has indicated overlap of the ghrelin binding site with those for
small molecule agonists and allosteric modulators of ghrelin (GHRL,
Q9UBU3) function [776]. In cell systems, the ghrelin receptor is constitutively active [777], but this is abolished by a naturally occurring
mutation (A204E) that results in decreased cell surface receptor expression and is associated with familial short stature [1458].
Nomenclature
ghrelin receptor
HGNC, UniProt
GHSR, Q92847
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Andrews ZB. (2011) The extra-hypothalamic actions of ghrelin on neuronal function. Trends Neurosci.
34: 31-40 [PMID:21035199]
De Smet B et al. (2009) Motilin and ghrelin as prokinetic drug targets. Pharmacol. Ther. 123: 207-23
[PMID:19427331]
Angelidis G et al. (2010) Current and potential roles of ghrelin in clinical practice. J. Endocrinol. Invest.
33: 823-38 [PMID:21293171]
De Vriese C et al. (2007) Influence of ghrelin on food intake and energy homeostasis. Curr Opin Clin Nutr
Metab Care 10: 615-9 [PMID:17693746]
Briggs DI et al. (2011) Metabolic status regulates ghrelin function on energy homeostasis. Neuroendocrinology 93: 48-57 [PMID:21124019]
Dezaki K et al. (2008) Ghrelin is a physiological regulator of insulin release in pancreatic islets and glucose
homeostasis. Pharmacol. Ther. 118: 239-49 [PMID:18433874]
Callaghan B et al. (2014) Novel and conventional receptors for ghrelin, desacyl-ghrelin, and pharmacologically related compounds. Pharmacol. Rev. 66: 984-1001 [PMID:25107984]
Granata R et al. (2010) Unraveling the role of the ghrelin gene peptides in the endocrine pancreas. J.
Mol. Endocrinol. 45: 107-18 [PMID:20595321]
Davenport AP et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. LVI. Ghrelin receptor nomenclature,
distribution, and function. Pharmacol. Rev. 57: 541-6 [PMID:16382107]
Nikolopoulos D et al. (2010) Ghrelin: a potential therapeutic target for cancer. Regul. Pept. 163: 7-17
[PMID:20382189]
Overview: The glucagon family of receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on the Glucagon receptor family [1234]) are activated by the endogenous peptide (2744 aa) hormones glucagon (GCG, P01275), glucagon-like peptide 1 (GCG, P01275), glucagon-like peptide 2 (GCG, P01275), glucose-dependent insulinotropic polypeptide (also known as gastric inhibitory polypeptide
(GIP, P09681)), GHRH (GHRH, P01286) and secretin (SCT, P09683). One common precursor (GCG) generates glucagon (GCG, P01275), glucagon-like peptide 1 (GCG, P01275) and glucagon-like peptide 2 (GCG,
P01275) peptides [827].
Nomenclature
GHRH receptor
GIP receptor
GLP-1 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
GHRHR, Q02643
GIPR, P48546
GLP1R, P43220
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
GLP-2 receptor
glucagon receptor
HGNC, UniProt
GLP2R, O95838
GCGR, P47871
secretin receptor
SCTR, P47872
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
teduglutide [1248]
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments: The glucagon receptor has been reported to interact with receptor activity modifying proteins (RAMPs), specifically RAMP2, in heterologous expression systems [333], although the physiological
significance of this has yet to be established.
Further Reading
74-81
Jones BJ et al. (2012) Minireview: Glucagon in stress and energy homeostasis. Endocrinology 153: 104954 [PMID:22294753]
Campbell JE et al. (2013) Pharmacology, physiology, and mechanisms of incretin hormone action. Cell
Metab. 17: 819-37 [PMID:23684623]
Mayo KE et al. (2003) International Union of Pharmacology. XXXV. The glucagon receptor family. Pharmacol. Rev. 55: 167-94 [PMID:12615957]
Cho YM et al. (2012) Targeting the glucagon receptor family for diabetes and obesity therapy. Pharmacol.
Ther. 135: 247-78 [PMID:22659620]
Miller LJ et al. (2013) The orthosteric agonist-binding pocket in the prototypic class B G-protein-coupled
secretin receptor. Biochem. Soc. Trans. 41: 154-8 [PMID:23356276]
Corazzini V et al. (2013) Molecular and clinical aspects of GHRH receptor mutations. Endocr Dev 24:
106-17 [PMID:23392099]
Rowland KJ et al. (2011) The "cryptic" mechanism of action of glucagon-like peptide-2. Am. J. Physiol.
Gastrointest. Liver Physiol. 301: G1-8 [PMID:21527727]
Donnelly D. (2012) The structure and function of the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor and its ligands.
Br. J. Pharmacol. 166: 27-41 [PMID:21950636]
Trujillo JM et al. (2014) GLP-1 receptor agonists for type 2 diabetes mellitus: recent developments and
emerging agents. Pharmacotherapy 34: 1174-86 [PMID:25382096]
Peptides 67:
Drucker DJ et al. (2014) Physiology and pharmacology of the enteroendocrine hormone glucagon-like
peptide-2. Annu. Rev. Physiol. 76: 561-83 [PMID:24161075]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
P01215), with a unique chain that confers the biological specificity to FSH (CGA FSHB, P01215 P01225), LH (CGA LHB, P01215
P01229), hCG (CGA CGB, P01215 P01233) or TSH (CGA TSHB,
P01215 P01222). There is binding cross-reactivity across the en-
Nomenclature
FSH receptor
LH receptor
HGNC, UniProt
FSHR, P23945
LHCGR, P22888
TSHR, P16473
Endogenous agonists
Antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments
TSH receptor
Further Reading
Chiamolera MI et al. (2009) Minireview: Thyrotropin-releasing hormone and the thyroid hormone feedback mechanism. Endocrinology 150: 1091-6 [PMID:19179434]
George JW et al. (2011) Current concepts of follicle-stimulating hormone receptor gene regulation. Biol.
Reprod. 84: 7-17 [PMID:20739665]
Menon KM et al. (2012) Structure, function and regulation of gonadotropin receptors - a perspective.
Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 356: 88-97 [PMID:22342845]
Gershengorn MC et al. (2012) Update in TSH receptor agonists and antagonists. J. Clin. Endocrinol.
Metab. 97: 4287-92 [PMID:23019348]
Puett D et al. (2010) The luteinizing hormone receptor: insights into structure-function relationships and
hormone-receptor-mediated changes in gene expression in ovarian cancer cells. Mol. Cell. Endocrinol.
329: 47-55 [PMID:20444430]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
for three forms of GnRH exist in some species but only GnRH I and
GnRH II and their cognate receptors have been found in mammals
[1283, 1284, 1741]. GnRH1 receptors are expressed primarily by
pituitary gonadotrophs, and mediate central control of mammalian
reproduction. They are selectively activated by GnRH I and all lack
the COOH-terminal tails found in other GPCRs. GnRH2 receptors do
have COOH-terminal tails and (where tested) are selective for GnRH
II over GnRH I. GnRH2 receptors are expressed by some primates but
are thought not to be expressed by humans because the human GNRHR2 gene contains a frame shift and an internal stop codon [1325].
An alternative phylogenetic classification divides GnRH receptors into
HGNC, UniProt
GnRH1 receptor
GNRHR, P30968
GnRH2 receptor
GNRHR2, Q96P88
Endogenous agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
cetrorelix (pKi 9.310) [113, 114, 1807], abarelix (pKi 9.19.5) [1807], degarelix
(pKi 8.8) [1938], ganirelix
[125 I]buserelin (Agonist) (pK 7.4) [1024] Rat,
Comments
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
specificity and ligand biased signalling) than effects on Gq/11 in pituitary cells [277, 1231]. Loss-of-function mutations in the GnRH1
receptor and deficiency of GnRH I (GNRH1, P01148) are associated with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism although some loss of
lum exit [517, 1061]. This may increase susceptibility to point mutations that further impair trafficking and also increase effects of nonpeptide antagonists on GnRH1 receptor trafficking to the plasma
membrane [517, 1061]. GnRH receptor signalling may be dependent upon receptor oligomerisation [363, 1007].
Further Reading
Bianco SD et al. (2009) The genetic and molecular basis of idiopathic hypogonadotropic hypogonadism.
Nat Rev Endocrinol 5: 569-76 [PMID:19707180]
McArdle CA and Roberson MS.. (2015) Gonadotropes and gonadotropin-releasing hormone signaling.
In Knobil and Neills Physiology of Reproduction (4th edition). Edited by Plant TM and Zeleznik AJ.:
Elsevier Inc.: [ISBN: 9780123971753]
Bliss SP et al. (2010) GnRH signaling, the gonadotrope and endocrine control of fertility. Front Neuroendocrinol 31: 322-40 [PMID:20451543]
Limonta P et al. (2012) GnRH receptors in cancer: from cell biology to novel targeted therapeutic strategies. Endocr. Rev. 33: 784-811 [PMID:22778172]
Tao YX et al. (2014) Chaperoning G protein-coupled receptors: from cell biology to therapeutics. Endocr.
Rev. 35: 602-47 [PMID:24661201]
235-275
Nomenclature
GPR18
GPR55
GPR119
HGNC, UniProt
GPR18, Q14330
GPR55, Q9Y2T6
GPR119, Q8TDV5
Endogenous agonists
N-arachidonoylglycine [980]
Selective agonists
Selective antagonists
Comments
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Comments: GPR18 failed to respond to a variety of lipidderived agents in an in vitro screen [2093], but has been reported to be activated by 19 -tetrahydrocannabinol [1246].
GPR55 responds to AM251 and rimonabant at micromolar
concentrations, compared to their nanomolar affinity as CB1 re-
Further Reading
Alexander SP. (2012) So what do we call GPR18 now? Br. J. Pharmacol. 165: 2411-3 [PMID:22014123]
Davenport AP et al. (2013) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXXVIII. G proteincoupled receptor list: recommendations for new pairings with cognate ligands. Pharmacol. Rev. 65:
967-86 [PMID:23686350]
Pertwee RG et al. (2010) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXIX. Cannabinoid
receptors and their ligands: beyond CB_1 and CB_2. Pharmacol. Rev. 62: 588-631 [PMID:21079038]
Ross RA. (2011) L--lysophosphatidylinositol meets GPR55: a deadly relationship. Trends Pharmacol. Sci.
32: 265-9 [PMID:21367464]
Hansen HS et al. (2012) GPR119 as a fat sensor. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 33: 374-81 [PMID:22560300]
Yamashita A et al. (2013) The actions and metabolism of lysophosphatidylinositol, an endogenous agonist
for GPR55. Prostaglandins Other Lipid Mediat. [PMID:23714700]
McHugh D. (2012) GPR18 in Microglia: implications for the CNS and endocannabinoid system signalling.
Br J Pharmacol [PMID:22563843]
Zhao P et al. (2013) GPR55 and GPR35 and their relationship to cannabinoid and lysophospholipid
receptors. Life Sci. 92: 453-7 [PMID:22820167]
Histamine receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Histamine receptors
Overview: Histamine receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Histamine Receptors [754, 1459]) are activated by the endogenous ligand histamine. Marked
species differences exist between histamine receptor orthologues [754].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
H1 receptor
HRH1, P35367
H2 receptor
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective
antagonists
HGNC, UniProt
Labelled ligands
H3 receptor
HRH3, Q9Y5N1
H4 receptor
HRH4, Q9H3N8
[125 I]iodoaminopotentidine
(Antagonist) (pKd 8.7) [1029]
Rat, [3 H]tiotidine (Antagonist)
HRH2, P25021
Comments: histaprodifen and methylhistaprodifen are reduced efficacy agonists. The H4 receptor appears to exhibit broadly similar pharmacology to the H3 receptor for imidazole-containing ligands, although (R)--methylhistamine and N--methylhistamine are
[3 H]histamine has been used to label the H4 receptor in heterologous expression systems.
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Berlin M et al. (2011) Histamine H3 receptor as a drug discovery target. J. Med. Chem. 54: 26-53
[PMID:21062081]
Hill SJ et al. (1997) International Union of Pharmacology. XIII. Classification of histamine receptors. Pharmacol. Rev. 49: 253-278 [PMID:9311023]
Leurs R et al. (2011) En route to new blockbuster anti-histamines: surveying the offspring of the expanding histamine receptor family. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 32: 250-7 [PMID:21414671]
Marson CM. (2011) Targeting the histamine H4 receptor. Chem. Rev. 111: 7121-56 [PMID:21842846]
Passani MB et al. (2011) Histamine receptors in the CNS as targets for therapeutic intervention. Trends
Pharmacol. Sci. 32: 242-9 [PMID:21324537]
Schwartz JC. (2011) The histamine H3 receptor: from discovery to clinical trials with pitolisant. Br. J.
Pharmacol. 163: 713-21 [PMID:21615387]
Nomenclature
HCA1 receptor
HCAR1, Q9BXC0
HCA2 receptor
HCAR2, Q8TDS4
HCA3 receptor
HCAR3, P49019
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Labelled ligands
HGNC, UniProt
Comments: Further closely-related GPCRs include the 5-oxoeicosanoid receptor (OXER1, Q8TDS5) and GPR31 (O00270).
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Chapman MJ et al. (2010) Niacin and fibrates in atherogenic dyslipidemia: pharmacotherapy to reduce
cardiovascular risk. Pharmacol. Ther. 126: 314-45 [PMID:20153365]
Offermanns S. (2014) Free fatty acid (FFA) and hydroxy carboxylic acid (HCA) receptors. Annu. Rev.
Pharmacol. Toxicol. 54: 407-34 [PMID:24160702]
Digby JE et al. (2012) Niacin in cardiovascular disease: recent preclinical and clinical developments.
Arterioscler. Thromb. Vasc. Biol. 32: 582-8 [PMID:22207729]
Offermanns S et al. (2011) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXXII: Nomenclature and Classification of Hydroxy-carboxylic Acid Receptors (GPR81, GPR109A, and GPR109B).
Pharmacol. Rev. 63: 269-90 [PMID:21454438]
Hanson J et al. (2012) Role of HCA_2 (GPR109A) in nicotinic acid and fumaric acid ester-induced effects
on the skin. Pharmacol. Ther. 136: 1-7 [PMID:22743741]
Offermanns S et al. (2015) Nutritional or pharmacological activation of HCA(2) ameliorates neuroinflammation. Trends Mol Med 21: 245-55 [PMID:25766751]
Kamanna VS et al. (2013) Recent advances in niacin and lipid metabolism. Curr. Opin. Lipidol. 24: 239-45
[PMID:23619367]
Kisspeptin receptor
G protein-coupled receptors ! Kisspeptin receptor
Overview: The kisspeptin receptor (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on the kisspeptin receptor [958]), like neuropeptide FF (NPFF), prolactin-releasing peptide
(PrP) and QRFP receptors (provisional nomenclature) responds to endogenous peptides with an arginine-phenylalanine-amide (RFamide) motif. Kisspeptin-54 (KISS1, Q15726) (KP54, originally named metastin),
kisspeptin-13 (KISS1, Q15726) (KP13) and kisspeptin-10 (KISS1) (KP10) are biologically-active peptides cleaved from the KISS1 (Q15726) gene product.
Nomenclature
kisspeptin receptor
HGNC, UniProt
KISS1R, Q969F8
Endogenous agonists
kisspeptin-10 (KISS1) (Selective) (pKi 8.610.4) [996, 1434], kisspeptin-54 (KISS1, Q15726) (Selective) (pKi 8.89.5) [996, 1434], kisspeptin-14 (KISS1, Q15726) (pKi 8.8)
[996], kisspeptin-13 (KISS1, Q15726) (Selective) (pKi 8.4) [996]
4-fluorobenzoyl-FGLRW-NH2 (pEC 9.2) [1894], [dY]1 KP-10 (pIC 8.4) [385] Mouse
Selective agonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
50
50
Further Reading
Kanda S et al. (2013) Structure, synthesis, and phylogeny of kisspeptin and its receptor. Adv. Exp. Med.
Biol. 784: 9-26 [PMID:23550000]
Pasquier J et al. (2014) Molecular evolution of GPCRs: Kisspeptin/kisspeptin receptors. J. Mol. Endocrinol.
52: T101-17 [PMID:24577719]
Kirby HR et al. (2010) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXVII. Kisspeptin receptor
nomenclature, distribution, and function. Pharmacol. Rev. 62: 565-78 [PMID:21079036]
Roseweir AK et al. (2013) Kisspeptin antagonists. Adv. Exp. Med. Biol. 784: 159-86 [PMID:23550006]
Millar RP et al. (2010) Kisspeptin antagonists: unraveling the role of kisspeptin in reproductive physiology.
Brain Res. 1364: 81-9 [PMID:20858467]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Leukotriene receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Leukotriene receptors
Overview: Leukotriene receptors (nomenclature as agreed
by the NC-IUPHAR subcommittee on Leukotriene Receptors [249, 250]) is activated by the endogenous ligands
leukotrienes (LT), synthesized from lipoxygenase metabolism of
arachidonic acid.
The human BLT1 receptor is the high affinity LTB4 receptor whereas
the BLT2 receptor in addition to being a low-affinity LTB4 receptor also binds several other lipoxygenase-products, such as
12S-HETE, 12S-HPETE, 15S-HETE, and the thromboxane synthase
product 12-hydroxyheptadecatrienoic acid. The BLT receptors mediate chemotaxis and immunomodulation in several leukocyte populations and are in addition expressed on non-myeloid cells, such
as vascular smooth muscle and endothelial cells. In addition to BLT
receptors, LTB4 has been reported to bind to the peroxisome proliferator activated receptor (PPAR) [1112] and the vanilloid TRPV1
ligand-gated nonselective cation channel [1245].
The receptors for the cysteinyl-leukotrienes (i.e. LTC4 , LTD4 and
LTE4 ) are termed CysLT1 and CysLT2 and exhibit distinct expression
Nomenclature
BLT1 receptor
BLT2 receptor
CysLT1 receptor
CysLT2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
LTB4R, Q15722
LTB4R2, Q9NPC1
CYSLTR1, Q9Y271
CYSLTR2, Q9NS75
LTB4 >20-hydroxy-LTB4
12R-HETE [2096]
LTC4 LTD4
1411, 1847]
Endogenous agonists
Antagonists
ICI198615 (- 8.48.6)
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
12-hydroxyheptadecatrienoic acid
> LTB4 > 12S-HETE = 12S-HPETE
> 15S-HETE > 12R-HETE >
20-hydroxy-LTB4 [1442, 2096]
LTE4 [733,
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
FPR2/ALX
HGNC, UniProt
FPR2, P25090
OXER1, Q8TDS5
Endogenous agonists
OXE receptor
Selective agonists
ATLa2 [662]
Endogenous antagonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments
Further Reading
Bck M et al. (2014) Update on leukotriene, lipoxin and oxoeicosanoid receptors: IUPHAR Review 7. Br.
J. Pharmacol. 171: 3551-74 [PMID:24588652]
Nelson JW et al. (2014) ALX/FPR2 receptor for RvD1 is expressed and functional in salivary glands. Am. J.
Physiol., Cell Physiol. 306: C178-85 [PMID:24259417]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
cently solved and demonstrates ligand access characteristics that allows for extracellular LPA binding [331]; these studies have also implicated cross-talk with endocannabinoids via phosphorylated intermediates that can activate this receptor. The identified receptors can
account for most, although not all, LPA-induced phenomena in the
literature, indicating that a majority of LPA-dependent phenomena
are receptor-mediated. Radioligand binding has been conducted in
heterologous expression systems using [3 H]LPA (e.g. [556]). In native systems, analysis of binding data is complicated by metabolism
and high levels of nonspecific binding, and therefore the relation-
HGNC, UniProt
LPA1 receptor
LPAR1, Q92633
LPA2 receptor
LPAR2, Q9HBW0
LPA3 receptor
LPAR3, Q9UBY5
Selective agonists
Selective antagonists
Comments
Nomenclature
HGNC, UniProt
LPA4 receptor
LPAR4, Q99677
LPA5 receptor
LPAR5, Q9H1C0
LPA6 receptor
LPAR6, P43657
Comments: Ki16425 [1432], VPC12249 [735] and VPC32179 [729] have antagonist activity at LPA1 and LPA3 receptors. There is growing evidence for in vivo efficacy of these chemical antagonists in several
disorders, including fetal hydrocephalus [2107], lung fibrosis [1429], and systemic sclerosis [1429].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Chun J et al. (2010) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXVIII. Lysophospholipid
receptor nomenclature. Pharmacol. Rev. 62: 579-87 [PMID:21079037]
Schober A et al. (2012) Lysophosphatidic acid in atherosclerotic diseases. Br. J. Pharmacol. 167: 465-82
[PMID:22568609]
Kihara Y et al. (2014) Lysophospholipid receptor nomenclature review: IUPHAR Review 8. Br. J. Pharmacol.
[PMID:24602016]
Sheng X et al. (2015) Lysophosphatidic acid signalling in development. Development 142: 1390-5
[PMID:25852197]
Mirendil H et al. (2015) LPA signaling initiates schizophrenia-like brain and behavioral changes in a mouse
model of prenatal brain hemorrhage. Transl Psychiatry 5: e541 [PMID:25849980]
Yung YC et al. (2014) LPA receptor signaling: pharmacology, physiology, and pathophysiology. J. Lipid
Res. 55: 1192-1214 [PMID:24643338]
Mutoh T et al. (2012) Insights into the pharmacological relevance of lysophospholipid receptors. Br. J.
Pharmacol. 165: 829-44 [PMID:21838759]
Yung YC et al. (2015) Lysophosphatidic Acid signaling in the nervous system. Neuron 85: 669-82
[PMID:25695267]
Nomenclature
S1P1 receptor
S1P2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
S1PR1, P21453
Rank order of
potency
Agonists
S1P3 receptor
S1P4 receptor
S1PR2, O95136
S1PR3, Q99500
S1PR4, O95977
S1PR5, Q9H228
S1P5 receptor
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
(continued)
Nomenclature
S1P1 receptor
S1P2 receptor
S1P3 receptor
S1P4 receptor
S1P5 receptor
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Selective agonists
Comments: The approved immunomodulator drug fingolimod can be phosphorylated in vivo [31] to generate a relatively potent agonist with activity at S1P1 , S1P3 , S1P4 and S1P5 receptors [215, 1198],
although its biological activity appears to involve an element of functional antagonism [339, 356, 1405].
Further Reading
Chi H. (2011) Sphingosine-1-phosphate and immune regulation: trafficking and beyond. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 32: 16-24 [PMID:21159389]
Mutoh T et al. (2012) Insights into the pharmacological relevance of lysophospholipid receptors. Br. J.
Pharmacol. 165: 829-44 [PMID:21838759]
Chun J et al. (2010) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXVIII. Lysophospholipid
receptor nomenclature. Pharmacol. Rev. 62: 579-87 [PMID:21079037]
OSullivan C et al. (2013) The structure and function of the S1P1 receptor. Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 34:
401-12 [PMID:23763867]
Kihara Y et al. (2015) Lysophospholipid receptors in drug discovery. Exp. Cell Res. 333: 171-7
[PMID:25499971]
Spiegel S et al. (2011) The outs and the ins of sphingosine-1-phosphate in immunity. Nat. Rev. Immunol.
11: 403-15 [PMID:21546914]
Nomenclature
MCH1 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
MCHR1, Q99705
MCH2 receptor
MCHR2, Q969V1
Selective antagonists
GW803430 (pIC50 9.3) [745], SNAP-7941 (pA2 9.2) [186], T-226296 (pIC50
8.3) [1853], ATC0175 (pIC50 7.98.1) [283]
[125 I]S36057 (Antagonist) (pK 9.29.5) [66], [125 I][Phe13 ,Tyr19 ]MCH
Labelled ligands
(Agonist) (pKd 9.2) [242], [3 H]MCH (human, mouse, rat) (Agonist) [242]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Boughton CK et al. (2012) Can Neuropeptides Treat Obesity? A review of neuropeptides and their potential role in the treatment of obesity. Br. J. Pharmacol. [PMID:23121386]
Chung S et al. (2011) Recent updates on the melanin-concentrating hormone (MCH) and its receptor
system: lessons from MCH1R antagonists. J. Mol. Neurosci. 43: 115-21 [PMID:20582487]
Eberle AN et al. (2010) Cellular models for the study of the pharmacology and signaling of melaninconcentrating hormone receptors. J. Recept. Signal Transduct. Res. 30: 385-402 [PMID:21083507]
Foord SM et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. XLVI. G protein-coupled receptor list. Phar-
Melanocortin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Melanocortin receptors
Overview: Melanocortin receptors (provisional nomenclature as recommended by NC-IUPHAR [530]) are activated by members of the melanocortin family (-MSH (POMC, P01189), -MSH (POMC,
P01189) and -MSH (POMC, P01189) forms; - form is not found in mammals) and adrenocorticotrophin (ACTH (POMC, P01189)). Endogenous antagonists include agouti (ASIP, P42127) and agouti-related protein
(AGRP, O00253).
Nomenclature
MC1 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
MC1R, Q01726
MC2 receptor
MC2R, Q01718
MC3 receptor
MC3R, P41968
MC4 receptor
MC4R, P32245
MC5 receptor
MC5R, P33032
Rank order of
potency
Selective agonists
corticotropin zinc
hydroxide
Antagonists
Selective
antagonists
Labelled ligands
[125 I]ACTH-(1-24)
(Agonist)
Comments: Polymorphisms of the MC1 receptor have been linked to variations in skin pigmentation. Defects of the MC2 receptor underlie familial glucocorticoid deficiency. Polymorphisms of the MC4 receptor
have been linked to obesity [282, 505].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Beaumont KA et al. (2011) Melanocortin MC_1 receptor in human genetics and model systems. Eur. J.
Pharmacol. 660: 103-10 [PMID:21199646]
Loos RJ. (2011) The genetic epidemiology of melanocortin 4 receptor variants. Eur. J. Pharmacol. 660:
156-64 [PMID:21295023]
Cooray SN et al. (2011) Melanocortin receptors and their accessory proteins. Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 331:
215-21 [PMID:20654690]
Foord SM et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. XLVI. G protein-coupled receptor list. Pharmacol Rev 57: 279-288 [PMID:15914470]
Renquist BJ et al. (2011) Physiological roles of the melanocortin MC_3 receptor. Eur. J. Pharmacol. 660:
13-20 [PMID:21211527]
Holloway PM et al. (2011) Targeting the melanocortin receptor system for anti-stroke therapy. Trends
Pharmacol. Sci. 32: 90-8 [PMID:21185610]
Yang Y. (2011) Structure, function and regulation of the melanocortin receptors. Eur. J. Pharmacol. 660:
125-30 [PMID:21208602]
Hruby VJ et al. (2011) Design of novel melanocortin receptor ligands: multiple receptors, complex pharmacology, the challenge. Eur. J. Pharmacol. 660: 88-93 [PMID:21208601]
Melatonin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Melatonin receptors
Overview: Melatonin receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Melatonin Receptors [446]) are activated by the endogenous ligands melatonin and N-acetylserotonin.
Nomenclature
MT1 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
MTNR1A, P48039
MT2 receptor
MTNR1B, P49286
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
agomelatine (pKi 9.910.5) [67, 132], ramelteon (pKi 10) [909, 1565]
Selective agonists
IIK7 (pKi 10.3) [506, 1814], 5-methoxy-luzindole (Partial agonist) (pKi 9.6) [447]
Selective antagonists
[125 I]SD6 (Agonist) (pKd 10.9) [1074], 2-[125 I]melatonin (Agonist) (pKd
9.910.7) [67, 447], [3 H]melatonin (Agonist) (pK 9.49.9) [230]
4P-PDOT (pKi 8.89.4) [67, 447, 448], K185 (pKi 9.3) [506, 1814], DH97 (pKi 8) [1865]
[125 I]SD6 (Agonist) (pK 10.2) [1074], 2-[125 I]melatonin (Agonist) (pK 9.710) [67, 447],
Labelled ligands
Comments:
melatonin,
2-iodo-melatonin,
agomelatine,
GR 196429, LY 156735 and ramelteon [909] are nonselective agonists for MT1 and MT2 receptors. (-)-AMMTC displays an 400-fold
greater agonist potency than (+)-AMMTC at rat MT1 receptors (see
AMMTC for structure) [1888]. Luzindole is an MT1 /MT2 melatonin
[125 I]DIV880 (Agonist, Partial agonist) (pKd 9.7) [1074], [3 H]melatonin (Agonist) (pKd
99.6) [230]
as kidney and testis, also termed the ML2 receptor, binds selectively
2-iodo-[125 I]5MCA-NAT [1302]. Pharmacological investigations of
MT3 binding sites have primarily been conducted in hamster tissues. At this site, N-acetylserotonin [467, 1149, 1302, 1516] and
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
5MCA-NAT [1516] appear to function as agonists, while prazosin
[1149] functions as an antagonist. The MT3 binding site of hamster kidney was also identified as the hamster homologue of human
quinone reductase 2 (NQO2, P16083 [1408, 1409]). The MT3 bind-
ing site activated by 5MCA-NAT in eye ciliary body is positively coupled to adenylyl cyclase and regulates chloride secretion [802]. Xenopus melanophores and chick brain express a distinct receptor (x420,
P49219; c346, P49288, initially termed Mel1C ) coupled to the Gi/o
Further Reading
Cardinali DP et al. (2012) Melatonin and its analogs in insomnia and depression. J. Pineal Res. 52: 365-75
[PMID:21951153]
Hickie IB et al. (2011) Novel melatonin-based therapies: potential advances in the treatment of major
depression. Lancet 378: 621-31 [PMID:21596429]
Dardente H. (2012) Melatonin-dependent timing of seasonal reproduction by the pars tuberalis: pivotal
roles for long daylengths and thyroid hormones. J. Neuroendocrinol. 24: 249-66 [PMID:22070540]
Korkmaz A et al. (2012) Gene regulation by melatonin linked to epigenetic phenomena. Gene 503: 1-11
[PMID:22569208]
Dubocovich ML et al. (2010) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXV. Nomenclature, classification, and pharmacology of G protein-coupled melatonin receptors. Pharmacol. Rev.
62: 343-80 [PMID:20605968]
Slominski A et al. (2008) Melatonin in the skin: synthesis, metabolism and functions. Trends Endocrinol.
Metab. 19: 17-24 [PMID:18155917]
orthosteric agonist response, without significantly activating the receptor in the absence of agonist.
In addition to orthosteric ligands that directly interact with the glutamate recognition site directly, allosteric modulators have been described. Negative allosteric modulators are listed separately. The
positive allosteric modulators most often act as potentiators of an
Although mGlu receptors have been thought to only form homodimers, recent studies revealed the possible formation of heterodimers
between either group-I receptors, or within and between groupII and -III receptors [441]. Although well characterized in transfected cells, co-localization and specific pharmacological properties
also suggest the existence of such heterodimers in the brain [2094].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
mGlu1 receptor
mGlu4 receptor
GRM1, Q13255
mGlu2 receptor
GRM2, Q14416
mGlu3 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
GRM3, Q14832
GRM4, Q14833
Endogenous
agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective
antagonists
Allosteric
modulators
Selective allosteric
modulators
Comments
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
mGlu5 receptor
mGlu6 receptor
GRM5, P41594
GRM6, O15303
mGlu7 receptor
GRM7, Q14831
mGlu8 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Allosteric modulators
3,3-difluorobenzaldazine (Positive)
(pIC50 5.68.5) [1415, 1416],
alloswitch-1 (Negative) (pIC50 8.1)
[1511] Rat, CDPPB (Positive) (pEC50
7.68) [956, 1114], MTEP (Negative)
(pKi 7.8) [223], MPEP (Negative)
(pIC50 7.47.7) [578, 580], fenobam
(Negative) (pIC50 7.2) [1519],
SIB-1893 (Negative) (pIC50 5.96.5)
[578, 1949], SIB-1757 (Negative)
(pIC50 66.4) [578, 1949], CPPHA
(Positive) (pIC50 6.3) [1416]
Selective allosteric
modulators
GRM8, O00222
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Conn PJ et al. (1997) Pharmacology and functions of metabotropic glutamate receptors. Annu. Rev.
Pharmacol. Toxicol. 37: 205-237 [PMID:9131252]
Niswender CM et al. (2010) Metabotropic glutamate receptors: physiology, pharmacology, and disease.
Annu. Rev. Pharmacol. Toxicol. 50: 295-322 [PMID:20055706]
Rondard P et al. (2011) The complexity of their activation mechanism opens new possibilities for the
modulation of mGlu and GABAB class C G protein-coupled receptors. Neuropharmacology 60: 82-92
[PMID:20713070]
326:
483-504
Nicoletti F et al. (2011) Metabotropic glutamate receptors: from the workbench to the bedside. Neuropharmacology 60: 1017-41 [PMID:21036182]
Motilin receptor
G protein-coupled receptors ! Motilin receptor
Overview: Motilin receptors (provisional nomenclature) are activated by a 22 amino-acid peptide derived from a precursor (MLN, P12872), which may also generate a motilin-associated peptide (MLN,
P12872). These receptors are also suggested to be responsible for the gastrointestinal prokinetic effects of certain macrolide antibiotics (often called motilides; e.g. erythromycin), although for many of these
molecules the evidence is sparse.
Nomenclature
motilin receptor
HGNC, UniProt
MLNR, O43193
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
alemcinal (pIC50 7.2) [1872], erythromycin-A (pIC50 5.56.5) [507, 1872], azithromycin (pEC50 5.5) [220]
Selective agonists
camicinal (pEC50 7.9) [99, 1639], mitemcinal (pEC50 7.57.8) [977, 1845] Rabbit
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
ferences in ligand affinities for the motilin receptor in dogs and humans may be explained by significant differences in receptor structure [1638]. Note that for the complex macrolide structures, selectivity of action has often not been rigorously examined and other
actions are possible (e.g. P2X inhibition by erythromycin; [2123]).
Small molecule motilin receptor agonists are now described [1093,
1639, 2013]. The motilin receptor does not appear to have constitutive activity [774]. Although not proven, the existence of biased
agonism at the receptor has been suggested [1225, 1292, 1636]. A
truncated 5-transmembrane structure has been identified but this is
without activity when transfected into a host cell [507].
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
De Smet B et al. (2009) Motilin and ghrelin as prokinetic drug targets. Pharmacol. Ther. 123: 207-23
[PMID:19427331]
Sanger GJ et al. (2012) Motilin: Toward a new understanding of the gastrointestinal neuropharmacology
and therapeutic use of motilin receptor agonists. Br. J. Pharmacol. [PMID:23189978]
Foord SM et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. XLVI. G protein-coupled receptor list. Pharmacol Rev 57: 279-288 [PMID:15914470]
Takeshita E et al. (2006) Molecular characterization and distribution of motilin family receptors in the
human gastrointestinal tract. J Gastroenterol 41: 223-230 [PMID:16699856]
Neuromedin U receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Neuromedin U receptors
Overview: Neuromedin U receptors (provisional nomenclature as recommended by NC-IUPHAR [530]) are activated by the endogenous 25 amino acid peptide neuromedin U
(neuromedin U-25 (NMU, P48645), NmU-25), a peptide originally
isolated from pig spinal cord [1287]. In humans, NmU-25 appears
to be the sole product of a precursor gene (NMU, P48645) showing
a broad tissue distribution, but which is expressed at highest lev-
Nomenclature
els in the upper gastrointestinal tract, CNS, bone marrow and fetal
liver. Much shorter versions of NmU are found in some species, but
not in human, and are derived at least in some instances from the
proteolytic cleavage of the longer NmU. Despite species differences
in NmU structure, the C-terminal region (particularly the C-terminal
pentapeptide) is highly conserved and contains biological activity.
Neuromedin S (neuromedin S-33 (NMS, Q5H8A3)) has also been
NMU1 receptor
NMU2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
NMUR1, Q9HB89
NMUR2, Q9GZQ4
Antagonists
Comments: NMU1 and NMU2 couple predominantly to Gq/11 although there is evidence of good coupling to Gi/o [213, 786, 794]. NMU1 and NMU2 can be labelled with [125 I]-NmU and [125 I]-NmS (of
R
various species, e.g. [1259]), BODIPY
TMR-NMU or Cy3B-NMU-8 [213]. A range of radiolabelled (125 I-), fluorescently labelled (e.g. Cy3, Cy5, rhodamine and FAM) and biotin labelled versions of neuromedin U-25
(NMU, P48645) and neuromedin S-33 (NMS, Q5H8A3) are now commercially available.
Further Reading
Brighton PJ et al. (2004) Neuromedin U and its receptors: structure, function, and physiological roles.
Pharmacol. Rev. 56: 231-48 [PMID:15169928]
Mitchell JD et al. (2009) Emerging pharmacology and physiology of neuromedin U and the structurally
related peptide neuromedin S. Br. J. Pharmacol. 158: 87-103 [PMID:19519756]
Budhiraja S et al. (2009) Neuromedin U: physiology, pharmacology and therapeutic potential. Fundam
Clin Pharmacol 23: 149-57 [PMID:19645813]
Foord SM et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. XLVI. G protein-coupled receptor list. Pharmacol Rev 57: 279-288 [PMID:15914470]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Overview: The Neuropeptide FF receptor family contains two subtypes, NPFF1 and NPFF2 (provisional nomenclature [530]), which exhibit high affinities for neuropeptide FF (NPFF, O15130) and RFamide
related peptides (RFRP: precursor gene symbol NPVF, Q9HCQ7). NPFF1 is broadly distributed in the central nervous system with the highest levels found in the limbic system and the hypothalamus. NPFF2 is present
in high density in the superficial layers of the mammalian spinal cord where it is involved in nociception and modulation of opioid functions.
Nomenclature
NPFF1 receptor
NPFF2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
NPFFR1, Q9GZQ6
NPFFR2, Q9Y5X5
Endogenous agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
[125 I]EYF (Agonist) (pKd 10.2) [1306], [3 H]EYF (Agonist) (pKd 9.3) [1855],
[125 I]NPFF (Agonist) [628]
Labelled ligands
Comments: An orphan receptor GPR83 (Q9NYM4) shows sequence similarities with NPFF1, NPFF2, PrRP and QRFP receptors. The antagonist RF9 is selective for NPFF receptors, but does not distinguish between
the NPFF1 and NPFF2 subtypes (pKi 7.1 and 7.2, respectively, [1745]).
Further Reading
Mouldous L et al. (2010) Opioid-modulating properties of the neuropeptide FF system. Biofactors 36:
423-9 [PMID:20803521]
Yang HY et al. (2008) Modulatory role of neuropeptide FF system in nociception and opiate analgesia.
Neuropeptides 42: 1-18 [PMID:17854890]
Vyas N et al. (2006) Structure-activity relationships of neuropeptide FF and related peptidic and nonpeptidic derivatives. Peptides 27: 990-6 [PMID:16490282]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Neuropeptide S receptor
G protein-coupled receptors ! Neuropeptide S receptor
Overview: The neuropeptide S receptor (NPS, provisional nomenclature [530]) responds to the 20 amino-acid peptide neuropeptide S derived from the precursor (NPS, P0C0P6).
Nomenclature
NPS receptor
HGNC, UniProt
NPSR1, Q6W5P4
Endogenous agonists
Labelled ligands
Comments: Polymorphisms in the NPS receptor have been suggested to be associated with asthma [1953] and irritable bowel syndrome [386].
Further Reading
Cannella N et al. (2013) The role of the neuropeptide S system in addiction: focus on its interaction with
the CRF and hypocretin/orexin neurotransmission. Prog. Neurobiol. 100: 48-59 [PMID:23041581]
Guerrini R et al. (2010) Neurobiology, pharmacology, and medicinal chemistry of neuropeptide S and its
receptor. Med Res Rev 30: 751-77 [PMID:19824051]
Dal Ben D et al. (2011) Neuropeptide S receptor: recent updates on nonpeptide antagonist discovery.
ChemMedChem 6: 1163-71 [PMID:21452188]
Pape HC et al. (2010) Neuropeptide S: a transmitter system in the brain regulating fear and anxiety.
Neuropharmacology 58: 29-34 [PMID:19523478]
Foord SM et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. XLVI. G protein-coupled receptor list. Pharmacol Rev 57: 279-288 [PMID:15914470]
Reinscheid RK. (2008) Neuropeptide S: anatomy, pharmacology, genetics and physiological functions.
Results Probl Cell Differ 46: 145-58 [PMID:18204825]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
NPBW1 receptor
NPBW2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
NPBWR1, P48145
NPBWR2, P48146
neuropeptide B-29 (NPB, Q8NG41) > neuropeptide B-23 (NPB, Q8NG41) >
neuropeptide W-23 (NPW, Q8N729) > neuropeptide W-30 (NPW, Q8N729) [211]
neuropeptide W-23 (NPW, Q8N729) > neuropeptide W-30 (NPW, Q8N729) >
neuropeptide B-29 (NPB, Q8NG41) > neuropeptide B-23 (NPB, Q8NG41) [211]
Selective agonists
Labelled ligands
Comments: Potency measurements were conducted with heterologously-expressed receptors with a range of 0.14-0.57 nM (NPBW1) and 0.98-21 nM (NPBW2).
NPBW1-/- mice show changes in social behavior, suggesting that the NPBW1 pathway may have an important role in the emotional responses of social interaction [1355].
Further Reading
Date Y et al. (2010) Neuropeptide W: an anorectic peptide regulated by leptin and metabolic state.
Endocrinology 151: 2200-10 [PMID:20189998]
Sakurai T. (2013) NPBWR1 and NPBWR2: Implications in Energy Homeostasis, Pain, and Emotion. Front
Endocrinol (Lausanne) 4: 23 [PMID:23515889]
Hondo M et al. (2008) The NPB/NPW neuropeptide system and its role in regulating energy homeostasis,
pain, and emotion. Results Probl Cell Differ 46: 239-56 [PMID:18204824]
Singh G et al. (2006) Neuropeptide B and W: neurotransmitters in an emerging G-protein-coupled receptor system. Br. J. Pharmacol. 148: 1033-41 [PMID:16847439]
Neuropeptide Y receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Neuropeptide Y receptors
Overview: Neuropeptide Y (NPY) receptors (nomenclature as
agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Neuropeptide Y Receptors [1270]) are activated by the endogenous
peptides neuropeptide Y (NPY, P01303), neuropeptide Y-(3-36),
peptide YY (PYY, P10082), PYY-(3-36) and pancreatic polypeptide
(PPY, P01298) (PP). The receptor originally identified as the Y3 receptor has been identified as the CXCR4 chemokine recepter (orig-
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
Y1 receptor
NPY4R, P50391
Y5 receptor
NPY5R, Q15761
y6 receptor
NPY1R, P25929
Y2 receptor
NPY2R, P49146
Y4 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
Rank order of
potency
neuropeptide Y = peptide YY
> pancreatic polypeptide
Endogenous
agonists
neuropeptide Y (NPY,
P01303), peptide YY (PYY,
P10082)
Selective agonists
Selective
antagonists
Labelled ligands
[3 H]BIBP3226 (Antagonist)
(pKd 8.7),
[125 I][Leu31 ,Pro34 ]NPY
Comments
(Agonist)
Note that Pro34 -containing
NPY and PYY can also bind
Y4 and Y5 receptors, so
strictly speaking are not
selective, but are the
preferred agonists.
NPY6R, Q99463
The y6 receptor is a
pseudogene in humans, but
is functional in mouse, rabbit
and some other mammals.
Comments: The Y1 agonists indicated are selective relative to Y2 receptors. BIBP3226 is selective relative to Y2 , Y4 and Y5 receptors [598]. NPY-(13-36) is Y2 selective relative to Y1 and Y5 receptors. PYY-(3-36)
is Y2 selective relative to Y1 receptors.
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Bowers ME et al. (2012) Neuropeptide regulation of fear and anxiety: Implications of cholecystokinin,
endogenous opioids, and neuropeptide Y. Physiol. Behav. 107: 699-710 [PMID:22429904]
Morales-Medina JC et al. (2010) A possible role of neuropeptide Y in depression and stress. Brain Res.
1314: 194-205 [PMID:19782662]
Decressac M et al. (2012) Neuropeptide Y and its role in CNS disease and repair. Exp. Neurol. 238:
265-72 [PMID:23022456]
Zengin A et al. (2010) Neuropeptide Y and sex hormone interactions in humoral and neuronal regulation
of bone and fat. Trends Endocrinol. Metab. 21: 411-8 [PMID:20202858]
Michel MC et al. (1998) XVI. International Union of Pharmacology recommendations for the nomenclature of neuropeptide Y, peptide YY and pancreatic polypeptide receptors. Pharmacol. Rev. 50:
143-150 [PMID:9549761]
Zhang L et al. (2011) The neuropeptide Y system: pathophysiological and therapeutic implications in
obesity and cancer. Pharmacol. Ther. 131: 91-113 [PMID:21439311]
Neurotensin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Neurotensin receptors
Overview: Neurotensin receptors (nomenclature as recommended by NC-IUPHAR [530]) are activated by the endogenous tridecapeptide neurotensin (pGlu-Leu-Tyr-Glu-Asn-Lys-Pro-Arg-Arg-Pro-TyrIle-Leu) derived from a precursor (NTS, 30990), which also generates neuromedin N, an agonist at the NTS2 receptor. A nonpeptide antagonist, SR142948A, shows high affinity (pKi 9) at both NTS1 and NTS2
receptors [664]. [3 H]neurotensin (human, mouse, rat) and [125 I]neurotensin (human, mouse, rat) may be used to label NTS1 and NTS2 receptors at 0.1-0.3 and 3-5 nM concentrations respectively.
Nomenclature
HGNC, UniProt
NTS1 receptor
NTSR1, P30989
NTS2 receptor
NTSR2, O95665
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments
Comments: neurotensin (NTS, P30990) appears to be a low-efficacy agonist at the NTS2 receptor [1959], while the NTS1 receptor antagonist meclinertant is an agonist at NTS2 receptors [1959]. An additional
protein, provisionally termed NTS3 (also known as NTR3, gp95 and sortilin; ENSG00000134243), has been suggested to bind lipoprotein lipase and mediate its degradation [1395]. It has been reported to interact
with the NTS1 receptor [1211] and has been implicated in hormone trafficking and/or neurotensin uptake.
Further Reading
Boules M et al. (2013) Diverse roles of neurotensin agonists in the central nervous system. Front Endocrinol
(Lausanne) 4: 36 [PMID:23526754]
Kalafatakis K et al. (2011) Contribution of neurotensin in the immune and neuroendocrine modulation
of normal and abnormal enteric function. Regul. Pept. 170: 7-17 [PMID:21549161]
Dupouy S et al. (2011) The potential use of the neurotensin high affinity receptor 1 as a biomarker for
cancer progression and as a component of personalized medicine in selective cancers. Biochimie 93:
1369-78 [PMID:21605619]
Mazella J et al. (2012) Neurotensin and its receptors in the control of glucose homeostasis. Front Endocrinol
(Lausanne) 3: 143 [PMID:23230428]
Foord SM et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. XLVI. G protein-coupled receptor list. Pharmacol Rev 57: 279-288 [PMID:15914470]
Myers RM et al. (2009) Cancer, chemistry, and the cell: molecules that interact with the neurotensin
receptors. ACS Chem. Biol. 4: 503-25 [PMID:19462983]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Opioid receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Opioid receptors
Overview: Opioid and opioid-like receptors are activated by
a variety of endogenous peptides including [Met]enkephalin
(PENK, P01210) (met), [Leu]enkephalin (PENK, P01210) (leu),
-endorphin (POMC, P01189) (-end), -neodynorphin (PDYN,
P01213), dynorphin A (PDYN, P01213) (dynA), dynorphin B
appropriate [376, 417, 530]. The human N/OFQ receptor is considered opioid-related rather than opioid because while it exhibits
a high degree of structural homology with the conventional opioid
receptors [1308], it displays a distinct pharmacology.
Nomenclature
receptor
receptor
receptor
NOP receptor
HGNC, UniProt
OPRD1, P41143
OPRK1, P41145
OPRM1, P35372
OPRL1, P41146
Principal endogenous
agonists
Endogenous agonists
nociceptin/orphanin FQ (PNOC,
Q13519) (Selective) (pKi 9.710.4)
[149, 1242, 1303, 1307, 1439]
Agonists
Selective agonists
N/OFQ-(1-13)-NH2 (pKi
10.110.4) [149, 661, 1242, 1439],
Ro64-6198 (pKi 9.6) [855]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
(continued)
Nomenclature
receptor
receptor
receptor
NOP receptor
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
(Agonist) [1746]
[717] Rat
[437, 1307]
(Antagonist) [1088]
Further Reading
Butelman ER et al. (2012) -opioid receptor/dynorphin system: genetic and pharmacotherapeutic implications for addiction. Trends Neurosci. 35: 587-96 [PMID:22709632]
Pradhan AA et al. (2011) The delta opioid receptor: an evolving target for the treatment of brain disorders.
Trends Pharmacol. Sci. 32: 581-90 [PMID:21925742]
Cox BM et al. (2015) Challenges for opioid receptor nomenclature: IUPHAR Review 9. Br. J. Pharmacol.
172: 317-23 [PMID:24528283]
Schrder W et al. (2014) Functional plasticity of the N/OFQ-NOP receptor system determines analgesic
properties of NOP receptor agonists. Br. J. Pharmacol. 171: 3777-800 [PMID:24762001]
Kelly E. (2011) The subtleties of -opioid receptor phosphorylation. Br. J. Pharmacol. 164: 294-7
[PMID:21449916]
Williams JT et al. (2013) Regulation of -opioid receptors: desensitization, phosphorylation, internalization, and tolerance. Pharmacol. Rev. 65: 223-54 [PMID:23321159]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Orexin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Orexin receptors
Overview: Orexin receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Orexin receptors [627]) are activated by the endogenous polypeptides orexin-A (HCRT, O43612) and
orexin-B (HCRT, O43612) (also known as hypocretin-1 and -2; 33 and 28 aa) derived from a common precursor, preproorexin or orexin precursor, by proteolytic cleavage [1629]. Binding to both receptors may be
accomplished with [125 I]orexin A (human, mouse, rat) [773].
Nomenclature
HGNC, UniProt
OX1 receptor
HCRTR1, O43613
OX2 receptor
HCRTR2, O43614
Selective agonists
(Sub)family-selective
antagonists
suvorexant (pKi 9.3) [377], SB-649868 (pKi 9.1) [419], filorexant (pKi 8.6) [2035],
almorexant (pIC50 7.9) [216]
filorexant (pKi 9.5) [2035], suvorexant (pKi 9.5) [377], SB-649868 (pKi 8.9) [419],
almorexant (pIC50 8.1) [216]
Selective antagonists
SB-408124 (pKi 7.27.6) [1042, 1190], SB-334867 (pKi 7.47.5) [1190, 1518]
EMPA (pKi 9) [1189], JNJ 10397049 (pKi 7.98.6) [1238], TCS-OX2-29 (pKi 7.4)
[760]
Labelled ligands
50
Comments: The primary coupling of orexin receptors to Gq/11 proteins is rather speculative and based on the strong activation of phospholipase C. Coupling of both receptors to Gi/o and Gs has also been
reported [1019, 1555]; for most cellular responses observed, the G protein pathway is unknown. The rank order of endogenous agonist potency may depend on the cellular signal transduction machinery. The
synthetic [Ala11 , D-Leu15 ]orexin-B may show poor OX2 receptor selectivity [1540].
Loss-of-function mutations in the gene encoding the OX2 receptor underlie canine hereditary narcolepsy [1111].
Further Reading
Boss C. (2014) Orexin receptor antagonistsa patent review (2010 to August 2014). Expert Opin Ther Pat
24: 1367-81 [PMID:25407283]
Gotter AL et al. (2012) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. LXXXVI. Orexin receptor
function, nomenclature and pharmacology. Pharmacol. Rev. 64: 389-420 [PMID:22759794]
Boss C et al. (2009) Biomedical application of orexin/hypocretin receptor ligands in neuroscience. J. Med.
Chem. 52: 891-903 [PMID:19199652]
Lebold TP et al. (2013) Selective orexin receptor antagonists. Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. 23: 4761-9
[PMID:23891187]
Christopher JA. (2014) Small-molecule antagonists of the orexin receptors. Pharm Pat Anal 3: 625-38
[PMID:25489915]
Mieda M et al. (2013) Orexin (hypocretin) receptor agonists and antagonists for treatment of sleep
disorders. Rationale for development and current status. CNS Drugs 27: 83-90 [PMID:23359095]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Oxoglutarate receptor
G protein-coupled receptors ! Oxoglutarate receptor
Overview: Nomenclature as recommended by NC-IUPHAR [396].
Nomenclature
oxoglutarate receptor
HGNC, UniProt
OXGR1, Q96P68
Endogenous agonists
P2Y receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! P2Y receptors
Overview: P2Y receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on P2Y Receptors [1, 2]) are activated by the endogenous ligands ATP, adenosine diphosphate, uridine triphosphate,
uridine diphosphate and UDP-glucose. The relationship of many of the cloned receptors to endogenously expressed receptors is not yet established and so it might be appropriate to use wording such as
uridine triphosphate-preferring (or ATP-, etc.) P2Y receptor or P2Y1 -like, etc., until further, as yet undefined, corroborative criteria can be applied [244, 486, 837, 2003, 2146].
Nomenclature
P2Y1 receptor
P2Y2 receptor
P2Y4 receptor
P2Y6 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
P2RY1, P47900
P2RY2, P41231
P2RY4, P51582
P2RY6, Q15077
Rank order of
potency
adenosine diphosphate>ATP
uridine triphosphate=ATP
uridine diphosphate
uridine triphosphate>ATP
Endogenous
agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
(continued)
Nomenclature
P2Y1 receptor
P2Y2 receptor
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
AR-C118925XX (pIC50
Labelled ligands
6) [924]
P2Y4 receptor
P2Y6 receptor
Nomenclature
P2Y11 receptor
P2Y12 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
P2RY11, Q96G91
P2RY12, Q9H244
ATP>uridine triphosphate
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
P2Y13 receptor
P2RY13, Q9BPV8
adenosine diphosphateATP
P2Y14 receptor
P2RY14, Q15391
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Comments: cangrelor shows selectivity for P2Y12 and P2Y13
receptors compared with other P2Y receptors [1209, 1848].
NF157 also has antagonist activity at P2X1 receptors [1923].
Uridine diphosphate has been reported to be an antagonist at the
P2Y14 receptor [548]. [35 S]ATPS has been used to label P2Y receptors in rat synaptosomal membranes [1682, 1683].
An orphan GPCR suggested to be a P2Y15 receptor [823] appears not to be a genuine nucleotide receptor [2], but rather responds to dicarboxylic acids [728]. Further P2Y-like receptors have
been cloned from non-mammalian sources; a clone from chick
brain, termed a p2y3 receptor (ENSGALG00000017327), couples
to the Gq/11 family of G proteins and shows the rank order
Further Reading
Abbracchio MP et al. (2006) International Union of Pharmacology LVIII: update on the P2Y G proteincoupled nucleotide receptors: from molecular mechanisms and pathophysiology to therapy. Pharmacol. Rev. 58: 281-341 [PMID:16968944]
Burnstock G. (2007) Purine and pyrimidine receptors. Cell. Mol. Life Sci. 64: 1471-83 [PMID:17375261]
Burnstock G et al. (2012) Purinergic signalling and the nervous system. Springer: 1-715
Erlinge D. (2011) P2Y receptors in health and disease. Adv. Pharmacol. 61: 417-39 [PMID:21586366]
Jacobson KA et al. (2009) Development of selective agonists and antagonists of P2Y receptors. Purinergic
Signalling 5: 75-89 [PMID:18600475]
Weisman GA et al. (2012) P2Y receptors in the mammalian nervous system: pharmacology, ligands and
therapeutic potential. CNS Neurol Disord Drug Targets 11: 722-38 [PMID:22963441]
von Kgelgen I et al. (2011) Molecular pharmacology, physiology, and structure of the P2Y receptors.
Adv. Pharmacol. 61: 373-415 [PMID:21586365]
Jacobson KA. (2013) Structure-based approaches to ligands for G-protein-coupled adenosine and P2Y
receptors, from small molecules to nanoconjugates. J. Med. Chem. 56: 3749-67 [PMID:23597047]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
PTH1 receptor
PTH2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
PTH1R, Q03431
PTH2R, P49190
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Comments: Although PTH (PTH, P01270) is an agonist at human PTH2 receptors, it fails to activate the rodent orthologues. TIP39 (PTH2, Q96A98) is a weak antagonist at PTH1 receptors [883].
Further Reading
Cheloha RW et al. (2015) Signal transduction at type-1 parathyroid hormone receptor. Nat Rev Endo.
Datta NS et al. (2009) PTH and PTHrP signaling in osteoblasts.
[PMID:19249350]
Cell.
Signal.
21: 1245-54
Gardella TJ et al. (2015) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. XCIII. The Parathyroid Hormone Receptors-Family B G Protein-Coupled Receptors. Pharmacol. Rev. 67: 310-37
[PMID:25713287]
Kraenzlin ME et al. (2011) Parathyroid hormone analogues in the treatment of osteoporosis. Nat Rev
Endocrinol [PMID:21750510]
Vilardaga JP et al. (2014) Endosomal generation of cAMP in GPCR signaling. Nat. Chem. Biol. 10: 700-6
[PMID:25271346]
Nomenclature
PAF receptor
HGNC, UniProt
PTAFR, P25105
Selective agonists
Selective antagonists
foropafant (pKi 10.3) [739], ABT-491 (pKi 9.2) [30], CV-6209 (pIC50 8.18.3) [619, 1357], L659989 (pKi 7.8) [811], apafant (pKi 5.27.5) [1460, 1831]
[3 H]PAF (Agonist) (pK 8.88.9) [555, 1357]
Labelled ligands
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Comments: Note that a previously recommended radioligand ([3 H]apafant; Kd 44.6 nM) is currently unavailable.
Further Reading
Foord SM et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. XLVI. G protein-coupled receptor list. Pharmacol Rev 57: 279-288 [PMID:15914470]
Prescott SM et al. (2000) Platelet-activating factor and related lipid mediators. Annu. Rev. Biochem. 69:
419-45 [PMID:10966465]
Ishii S et al. (2000) Platelet-activating factor (PAF) receptor and genetically engineered PAF receptor mutant mice. Prog. Lipid Res. 39: 41-82 [PMID:10729607]
Shimizu T. (2009) Lipid mediators in health and disease: enzymes and receptors as therapeutic targets
for the regulation of immunity and inflammation. Annu. Rev. Pharmacol. Toxicol. 49: 123-50
[PMID:18834304]
67-168
Prokineticin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Prokineticin receptors
receptors [1215], while Bv8, an orthologue of PROK2 from amphibians (Bombina sp., [1304]), is equipotent at recombinant PKR1 and
PKR2 [1371], and has high potency in macrophage chemotaxis assays, which are lost in PKR1 -null mice.
Nomenclature
PKR1
HGNC, UniProt
PROKR1, Q8TCW9
PKR2
PROKR2, Q8NFJ6
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Selective antagonists
triazine compound PC1 (pKi 7.7) [87], triazine compound PC7 (pIC50 7.5)
[842, 1552], triazine compound PC10 (pIC50 7) [842]
[125 I]BH-MIT1 (Agonist) (pIC 8.4) [1215]
Labelled ligands
50
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Comments: Genetic mutations in PROKR1 are associated with Hirschsprungs disease [1614], while genetic mutations in PROKR2 are associated with hypogonadotropic hypogonadism with anosmia [430],
hypopituitarism with pituitary stalk interruption [1575] and Hirschsprungs disease [1614].
Further Reading
Boulberdaa M et al. (2011) Prokineticin receptor 1 (PKR1) signalling in cardiovascular and kidney functions. Cardiovasc. Res. 92: 191-8 [PMID:21856786]
Negri L et al. (2012) Bv8/PK2 and prokineticin receptors: a druggable pronociceptive system. Curr Opin
Pharmacol 12: 62-6 [PMID:22136937]
Martin C et al. (2011) The role of the prokineticin 2 pathway in human reproduction: evidence from the
study of human and murine gene mutations. Endocr. Rev. 32: 225-46 [PMID:21037178]
Life Sci.
81:
Cell Biol.
40: 1679-84
Cancer Lett.
296:
144-9
Int.
J. Biochem.
1103-16
Nomenclature
PrRP receptor
HGNC, UniProt
PRLHR, P49683
Endogenous agonists
PrRP-20 (PRLH, P81277) (Selective) (pKi 99.6) [481, 1043], PrRP-31 (PRLH, P81277) (Selective) (pKi 99.2) [481, 1043]
Endogenous antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments: The orphan receptor GPR83 (Q9NYM4) shows sequence similarities with NPFF1, NPFF2, PrRP and QRFP receptors.
Further Reading
Samson WK et al. (2006) Prolactin releasing peptide (PrRP): an endogenous regulator of cell growth.
Peptides 27: 1099-103 [PMID:16500730]
Takayanagi Y et al. (2010) Roles of prolactin-releasing peptide and RFamide related peptides in the control
of stress and food intake. FEBS J. 277: 4998-5005 [PMID:21126313]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Prostanoid receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Prostanoid receptors
Overview: Prostanoid receptors (nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Prostanoid Receptors [2043]) are activated by the endogenous ligands prostaglandins PGD2 ,
PGE2 , PGF2 , PGH2 , prostacyclin [PGI2 ] and thromboxane A2 . Measurement of the potency of PGI2 and thromboxane A2 is hampered by their instability in physiological salt solution; they are often replaced by
cicaprost and U46619, respectively, in receptor characterization studies.
Nomenclature
DP1 receptor
DP2 receptor
IP receptor
FP receptor
TP receptor
HGNC, UniProt
PTGDR, Q13258
PTGDR2, Q9Y5Y4
PTGIR, P43119
PTGFR, P43088
TBXA2R, P21731
thromboxane A2 = PGH2
PGD2 , PGE2 , PGF2 , PGI2
Agonists
13,14-dihydro-15-keto-PGD2
(pKi 7.48.5) [712, 1656,
1815]
Selective agonists
15(R)-15-methyl-PGD2 (pKi
8.9) [712, 1312, 1815]
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
EP1 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
PTGER1, P34995
EP2 receptor
PTGER2, P43116
EP3 receptor
PTGER3, P43115
EP4 receptor
PTGER4, P35408
Endogenous agonists
Agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments: ramatroban is an antagonist at both DP2 and TP receptors. Whilst cicaprost is selective for IP receptors, it does exhibit
moderate agonist potency at EP4 receptors [7]. Apart from IP receptors, iloprost also binds to other prostanoid receptors such as EP1
receptors. The TP receptor exists in and isoforms due to alternative splicing of the cytoplasmic tail [1566]. The IP receptor agonist
treprostinil binds also to human EP2 and DP1 receptors with high
affinity (pKi 8.44 and 8.36, respectively).
The EP1 agonist 17-phenyl-!-trinor-PGE2 also shows agonist activity at EP3 receptors. Butaprost and SC46275 may require deesterification within tissues to attain full agonist potency. There is
evidence for subtypes of FP [1105], IP [1851, 2037] and TP [1005]
receptors. mRNA for the EP1 and EP3 receptors undergo alternative
[997, 1370]). The number of EP3 receptor (protein) variants are variable depending on species, with five in human, three in rat and three
in mouse. The possibility of additional receptors for the isoprostanes
has been suggested [1531]. Putative receptor(s) for prostamide F
(which as yet lack molecular correlates) and which preferentially recognize PGF2-1-ethanolamide and its analogues (e.g. Bimatoprost)
have been identified, together with moderate-potency antagonists
(e.g. AGN 211334) [2042].
The free acid form of AL-12182, AL12180, used in in vitro studies, has
a EC50 value of 15nM which is the concentration of the compound
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Further Reading
Fltou M et al. (2010) Vasoconstrictor prostanoids. Pflugers Arch. 459: 941-50 [PMID:20333529]
Woodward DF et al. (2011) International union of basic and clinical pharmacology. LXXXIII: classification of prostanoid receptors, updating 15 years of progress. Pharmacol. Rev. 63: 471-538
[PMID:21752876]
Fltou M et al. (2010) The thromboxane/endoperoxide receptor (TP): the common villain. J. Cardiovasc.
Pharmacol. 55: 317-32 [PMID:20422736]
Yang C et al. (2011) Prostaglandin E receptors as inflammatory therapeutic targets for atherosclerosis.
Life Sci. 88: 201-5 [PMID:21112342]
Schuligoi R et al. (2010) CRTH2 and D-type prostanoid receptor antagonists as novel therapeutic agents
for inflammatory diseases. Pharmacology 85: 372-82 [PMID:20559016]
af Forselles KJ et al. (2011) In vitro and in vivo characterization of PF-04418948, a novel, potent and
selective prostaglandin EP_2 receptor antagonist. Br. J. Pharmacol. 164: 1847-56 [PMID:21595651]
Billot X et al. (2003) Discovery of a potent and selective agonist of the prostaglandin EP4 receptor. Bioorg.
Med. Chem. Lett. 13: 1129-32 [PMID:12643927]
Proteinase-activated receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Proteinase-activated receptors
Overview: Proteinase-activated receptors (PARs, nomenclature as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on
Proteinase-activated Receptors [770]) are unique members
of the GPCR superfamily activated by proteolytic cleavage of their
amino terminal exodomains. Agonist proteinase-induced hydrolysis unmasks a tethered ligand (TL) at the exposed amino terminus, which acts intramolecularly at the binding site in the body of
Nomenclature
PAR1
PAR2
PAR3
PAR4
HGNC, UniProt
F2R, P25116
F2RL1, P55085
F2RL2, O00254
F2RL3, Q96RI0
Agonist proteases
Selective agonists
AYPGKF-NH2, GYPGKF-NH2,
GYPGQV-NH2
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
(continued)
Nomenclature
PAR1
PAR2
PAR3
PAR4
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments
Further Reading
Adams MN et al. (2011) Structure, function and pathophysiology of protease activated receptors. Pharmacol. Ther. 130: 248-82 [PMID:21277892]
Ramachandran R et al. (2012) Targeting proteinase-activated receptors: therapeutic potential and challenges. Nat Rev Drug Discov 11: 69-86 [PMID:22212680]
Canto I et al. (2012) Allosteric modulation of protease-activated receptor signaling. Mini Rev Med Chem
12: 804-11 [PMID:22681248]
Soh UJ et al. (2010) Signal transduction by protease-activated receptors. Br. J. Pharmacol. 160: 191-203
[PMID:20423334]
Garca PS et al. (2010) The role of thrombin and protease-activated receptors in pain mechanisms.
Thromb. Haemost. 103: 1145-51 [PMID:20431855]
Vergnolle N. (2009) Protease-activated receptors as drug targets in inflammation and pain. Pharmacol.
Ther. 123: 292-309 [PMID:19481569]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
QRFP receptor
G protein-coupled receptors ! QRFP receptor
Overview: The human gene encoding the QRFP receptor (QRFPR, also known as the peptide P518 receptor), previously designated as an orphan GPCR receptor was identified in 2001 by Lee et al. from a
hypothalamus cDNA library [1066]. However, the reported cDNA (AF411117) is a chimera with bases 1-127 derived from chromosome 1 and bases 155-1368 derived from chromosome 4. When corrected, QRFPR
(also referred to as SP9155 or AQ27) encodes a 431 amino acid protein that shares sequence similarities in the transmembrane spanning regions with other peptide receptors. These include neuropeptide FF2 (38%),
neuropeptide Y2 (37%) and galanin GalR1 (35%) receptors.
Nomenclature
QRFP receptor
HGNC, UniProt
QRFPR, Q96P65
Endogenous agonists
QRFP43 (QRFP, P83859) (pIC50 7.89.3) [557, 1850] Rat, QRFP26 (QRFP) (pEC50 8.2) [867]
[125 I]QRFP43 (human) (Agonist) (pK 7.810.3) [557, 1017, 1850]
Labelled ligands
Comments: The orphan receptor GPR83 (9NYM4) shows sequence similarities with the QRFP receptor, as well as with the NPFF1, NPFF2, and PrRP receptors.
Further Reading
Fukusumi S et al. (2006) Recent advances in mammalian RFamide peptides: the discovery and functional
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
RXFP1 receptor
RXFP2 receptor
RXFP3 receptor
RXFP4 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
RXFP1, Q9HBX9
RXFP2, Q8WXD0
RXFP3, Q9NSD7
RXFP4, Q8TDU9
Endogenous antagonists
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
Selective allosteric
modulators
Labelled ligands
Comments
europium-labelled relaxin is a
fluorescent ligand for this receptor
(Kd =0.5nM) [1707].
europium-labelled INSL3 is a
fluorescent ligand for this receptor
(Kd =1nM) [1709].
europium-labelled relaxin-3-B/INSL5
A chimera
and R3-B1-22R are fluorescent
ligands for this receptor (Kd =5nM
and 28nM) [714, 715].
variants of the human RXFP1 and RXFP2 receptors have been identified, most of which do not bind relaxin family peptides [1340]. Splice
variants of RXFP1 encoding the N-terminal LDLa module act as antagonists of RXFP1 signalling [1685, 1687]. cAMP elevation appears
to be a major signalling pathway for RXFP1 and RXFP2 [795, 796],
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
but RXFP1 also activates MAP kinases, nitric oxide signalling, tyrosine
kinase phosphorylation and relaxin can interact with glucocorticoid
receptors [681]. RXFP1 signalling involves lipid rafts, residues in the
C-terminus of the receptor and activation of phosphatidylinositol-3kinase [682]. More recent studies provide evidence that RXFP1 is
pre-assembled in signalosomes with other signalling proteins including Gs , G and adenylyl cyclase 2 that display constitutive activity
and are exquisitely sensitive to sub-picomolar concentrations of relaxin [679]. The cyclic AMP signalling pattern is highly dependent
on the cell type in which RXFP1 is expressed [680].
The receptor expression profiles suggested that RXFP3 was a neuropeptide receptor and RXFP4 a gut hormone receptor. Studies in
rats and mice (including wildtype, and relaxin-3 and RXFP3 genedeletion strains [671, 782, 1759, 1971] have revealed putative roles
for the relaxin-3/RXFP3 system in the modulation of feeding [564,
566, 714, 1706, 1760], anxiety [1618, 2114], and reward and motivated, goal-directed behaviours [782, 1619, 1971], particularly in
relation to the integration of stress and corticotrophin-releasing factor signalling [1162], with implications for the therapeutic treatment
Further Reading
Bathgate RA et al. (2013) Relaxin family peptides and their receptors. Physiol. Rev. 93: 405-80
[PMID:23303914]
Bathgate RA et al. (2006) International Union of Pharmacology LVII: recommendations for the nomenclature of receptors for relaxin family peptides. Pharmacol Rev 58: 7-31 [PMID:16507880]
Callander GE et al. (2010) Relaxin family peptide systems and the central nervous system. Cell. Mol. Life
Sci. 67: 2327-41 [PMID:20213277]
Du XJ et al. (2010) Cardiovascular effects of relaxin: from basic science to clinical therapy. Nat Rev Cardiol
7: 48-58 [PMID:19935741]
Halls ML et al. (2015) International Union of Basic and Clinical Pharmacology. XCV. Recent advances in
the understanding of the pharmacology and biological roles of relaxin family peptide receptors 1-4,
the receptors for relaxin family peptides. Pharmacol. Rev. 67: 389-440 [PMID:25761609]
Ivell R et al. (2011) Relaxin family peptides in the male reproductive systema critical appraisal. Mol. Hum.
Reprod. 17: 71-84 [PMID:20952422]
Kong RC et al. (2010) Membrane receptors: structure and function of the relaxin family peptide receptors.
Mol. Cell. Endocrinol. 320: 1-15 [PMID:20138959]
van der Westhuizen ET et al. (2008) Relaxin family peptide receptorsfrom orphans to therapeutic targets.
Drug Discov. Today 13: 640-51 [PMID:18675759]
Somatostatin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Somatostatin receptors
Overview: Somatostatin (somatotropin release inhibiting factor)
is an abundant neuropeptide, which acts on five subtypes of somatostatin receptor (sst1 -sst5 ; nomenclature as agreed by
the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on Somatostatin Receptors [790]). Activation of these receptors produces a wide range
of physiological effects throughout the body including the inhibition of secretion of many hormones. The relationship of the cloned
receptors to endogenously expressed receptors is not yet well established in some cases. Endogenous ligands for these receptors
are somatostatin-14 (SRIF-14 (SST, P61278)) and somatostatin-28
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
sst1 receptor
sst2 receptor
sst3 receptor
sst4 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
SSTR1, P30872
SSTR2, P30874
SSTR3, P32745
SSTR4, P31391
SSTR5, P35346
Agonists
Selective agonists
Labelled ligands
8.18.9) [1412]
[125 I]Tyr3 SMS 201-995
Comments
sst5 receptor
50
Comments: [125 I]Tyr11 -SRIF-14, [125 I]LTT-SRIF-28, [125 I]CGP 23996 and [125 I]Tyr10 -CST14 may be used to label somatostatin receptors nonselectively. A number of nonpeptide subtype-selective agonists
have been synthesised [1595]. A novel peptide somatostatin analogue, somatoprim, has affinity for sst2 , sst4 and sst5 receptors and is a potent inhibitor of GH secretion [1514, 1726].
Further Reading
Ben-Shlomo A et al. (2010) Pituitary somatostatin receptor signaling. Trends Endocrinol. Metab. 21:
123-33 [PMID:20149677]
Hoyer D et al. (2000) Somatostatin receptors. In The IUPHAR Compendium of Receptor Characterization
and Classification, 2nd edn. Edited by Watson SP, Girdlestone D: IUPHAR Media: 354-364
Colao A et al. (2011) Resistance to somatostatin analogs in acromegaly. Endocr. Rev. 32: 247-71
[PMID:21123741]
Csaba Z et al. (2012) Molecular mechanisms of somatostatin receptor trafficking. J. Mol. Endocrinol. 48:
R1-12 [PMID:22159161]
Zatelli MC et al. (2009) The significance of new somatostatin analogs as therapeutic agents. Curr Opin
Investig Drugs 10: 1025-31 [PMID:19777390]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Succinate receptor
G protein-coupled receptors ! Succinate receptor
Overview: Nomenclature as recommended by NC-IUPHAR [396].
Nomenclature
succinate receptor
HGNC, UniProt
SUCNR1, Q9BXA5
Endogenous agonists
Tachykinin receptors
G protein-coupled receptors ! Tachykinin receptors
Overview: Tachykinin receptors (provisional nomenclature
as recommended by NC-IUPHAR [530]) are activated by the
endogenous peptides substance P (TAC1, P20366) (SP), neurokinin A
(TAC1, P20366) (NKA; previously known as substance K, neurokinin
, neuromedin L), neurokinin B (TAC3, Q9UHF0) (NKB; previously
Nomenclature
NK1 receptor
TACR1, P25103
NK2 receptor
TACR2, P21452
NK3 receptor
TACR3, P29371
Agonists
HGNC, UniProt
Selective agonists
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
(continued)
Nomenclature
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
NK1 receptor
aprepitant (pKi 10.1) [673, 674], lanepitant (pKi
9.810) [613], lanepitant (pIC50 9.8) [798],
CP 99994 (pKi 9.39.7) [50, 1645], casopitant
(pKi 9.4) [798, 1905], vestipitant (pKi 9.4) [221,
418], nolpitantium (pIC50 8.99) [1882], RP67580
(pIC50 7.7) [528]
[125 I]L703,606 (Antagonist) (pK 9.5) [537],
d
NK2 receptor
GR94800 (pKi 9.8) [200], saredutant (pKi 9.49.7)
[50, 477, 1645], GR 159897 (pKd 7.89.5) [133,
477, 1770], MEN10627 (pKi 9.2) [603],
nepadutant (pKi 8.58.7) [272, 343]
NK3 receptor
osanetant (pKi 8.49.7) [50, 110, 342, 476, 898,
1450, 1644, 1645, 1882], talnetant (pKi 7.49)
[129, 604, 1644, 1645], PD157672 (pIC50
7.87.9) [165, 1882]
Comments: The NK1 receptor has also been described to couple to other G proteins [1606]. The hexapeptide agonist septide appears to bind to an overlapping but non-identical site to substance P (TAC1,
P20366) on the NK1 receptor. There are suggestions for additional subtypes of tachykinin receptor; an orphan receptor (SwissProt P30098) with structural similarities to the NK3 receptor was found to respond to
NKB when expressed in Xenopus oocytes or Chinese hamster ovary cells [433, 1004].
Further Reading
Commons KG. (2010) Neuronal pathways linking substance P to drug addiction and stress. Brain Res.
1314: 175-82 [PMID:19913520]
Rance NE et al. (2010) Neurokinin B and the hypothalamic regulation of reproduction. Brain Res. 1364:
116-28 [PMID:20800582]
Douglas SD et al. (2011) Neurokinin-1 receptor: functional significance in the immune system in reference to selected infections and inflammation. Ann. N. Y. Acad. Sci. 1217: 83-95 [PMID:21091716]
Rojas C et al. (2012) Pharmacological mechanisms of 5-HT_3 and tachykinin NK_1 receptor antagonism to prevent chemotherapy-induced nausea and vomiting. Eur. J. Pharmacol. 684: 1-7
[PMID:22425650]
Foord SM et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. XLVI. G protein-coupled receptor list. Pharmacol Rev 57: 279-288 [PMID:15914470]
Pantaleo N et al. (2010) The mammalian tachykinin ligand-receptor system: an emerging target for
central neurological disorders. CNS Neurol Disord Drug Targets 9: 627-35 [PMID:20632965]
Tuluc F et al. (2009) Neurokinin 1 receptor isoforms and the control of innate immunity. Trends Immunol.
30: 271-6 [PMID:19427266]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
TRH1 receptor
TRH2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
TRHR, P34981
Antagonists
Selective antagonists
midazolam (pKi 5.5) [444] Rat, chlordiazepoxide (pKi 4.8) [444] Rat,
chlordiazepoxide (pKi 4.7) [1804] Mouse
Comments
Further Reading
Blek R et al. (2011) TRH-like peptides. Physiol Res 60: 207-15 [PMID:21114375]
Foord SM et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. XLVI. G protein-coupled receptor list. Pharmacol Rev 57: 279-288 [PMID:15914470]
Nillni EA. (2010) Regulation of the hypothalamic thyrotropin releasing hormone (TRH) neuron by neuronal and peripheral inputs. Front Neuroendocrinol 31: 134-56 [PMID:20074584]
tor [1181]) has been shown to have affinity for the endogenous
trace amines tyramine, -phenylethylamine and octopamine in addition to the classical amine dopamine [185]. Emerging evidence
suggests that TA1 is a modulator of monoaminergic activity in the
brain [2062] with TA1 and dopamine D2 receptors shown to form
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
HGNC, UniProt
TA1 receptor
TAAR1, Q96RJ0
Agonists
Antagonists
Labelled ligands
TAAR3, in some individuals, and TAAR4 are pseudogenes in man, although functional in rodents. The signalling characteristics and pharmacology of TAA5 (PNR, Putative Neurotransmitter Receptor: TAAR5,
O14804), TAA6 (Trace amine receptor 4, TaR-4: TAAR6, 96RI8), TAA8
(Trace amine receptor 5, GPR102: TAAR8, Q969N4 ) and TAA9 (trace
amine associated receptor 9: TAAR9, 96RI9) are lacking. The thy-
Further Reading
Jing L et al. (2015) Trace amine-associated receptor 1: A promising target for the treatment of psychostimulant addiction. Eur. J. Pharmacol. [PMID:26092759]
Miller GM. (2011) The emerging role of trace amine-associated receptor 1 in the functional regulation of
monoamine transporters and dopaminergic activity. J. Neurochem. 116: 164-76 [PMID:21073468]
Liberles SD. (2015) Trace amine-associated receptors: ligands, neural circuits, and behaviors. Curr. Opin.
Neurobiol. 34C: 1-7 [PMID:25616211]
Sotnikova TD et al. (2009) Trace amine-associated receptors as emerging therapeutic targets. Mol. Pharmacol. 76: 229-35 [PMID:19389919]
Maguire JJ et al. (2009) International Union of Pharmacology. LXXII. Recommendations for trace amine
receptor nomenclature. Pharmacol. Rev. 61: 1-8 [PMID:19325074]
Zucchi R et al. (2006) Trace amine-associated receptors and their ligands. Br J Pharmacol 149: 967-978
[PMID:17088868]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Urotensin receptor
G protein-coupled receptors ! Urotensin receptor
Overview: The urotensin-II (U-II) receptor (UT, nomenclature
as agreed by the NC-IUPHAR Subcommittee on the
Urotensin receptor [439, 530, 1952]) is activated by the endogenous dodecapeptide urotensin-II (UTS2, O95399), originally
isolated from the urophysis, the endocrine organ of the caudal neurosecretory system of teleost fish [134]. Several structural forms of
U-II exist in fish and amphibians. The Goby orthologue was used to
identify U-II as the cognate ligand for the predicted receptor encoded
by the rat gene gpr14 [375, 1130, 1327, 1410]. Human urotensin-II
(UTS2, O95399), an 11-amino-acid peptide [375], retains the cyclohexapeptide sequence of goby U-II that is thought to be important
in ligand binding [219, 957]. This sequence is also conserved in the
deduced amino-acid sequence of rat urotensin-II {Rat} (14 aminoacids) and mouse urotensin-II {Mouse} (14 amino-acids), although
Nomenclature
UT receptor
HGNC, UniProt
UTS2R, Q9UKP6
Endogenous agonists
urotensin II-related peptide (UTS2B, Q765I0) (pKd 9.6) [1179], urotensin-II (UTS2, O95399) (pKi 8.6) [440, 475, 647]
Selective agonists
[Pen5]-U (4-11) (human) (pKi 9.7) [647], U-II-(4-11) (human) (pKi 9.6) [647], FL104 (pEC50 5.87.5) [1075, 1077], AC-7954 (pKi 6.6) [382, 1076]
Selective antagonists
urantide (pKi 8.3) [1469], SB-706375 (pKi 8) [440], palosuran (pIC50 7.1) [353], SB-611812 (pKi 6.6) [1550]
[125 I]U-II (human) (Agonist) (pK 9.49.6) [42, 1179]
Labelled ligands
Comments: In human vasculature, human urotensin-II (UTS2, O95399) elicits both vasoconstrictor (pD2 9.3-10.1, [1179]) and vasodilator (pIC50 10.3-10.4, [1800]) responses.
Further Reading
Douglas SA Ohlstein EH. (2000) Urotensin receptors. In The IUPHAR Receptor Compendium of Receptor
Characterization and Classification. Edited by Girdlestone D: IUPHAR Media Ltd: 365-372
Hunt BD et al. (2010) A rat brain atlas of urotensin-II receptor expression and a review of central urotensinII effects. Naunyn Schmiedebergs Arch. Pharmacol. 382: 1-31 [PMID:20422157]
Foord SM et al. (2005) International Union of Pharmacology. XLVI. G protein-coupled receptor list. Phar-
Maryanoff BE et al. (2010) Urotensin-II receptor modulators as potential drugs. J. Med. Chem. 53:
2695-708 [PMID:20043680]
Ross B et al. (2010) Role of urotensin II in health and disease. Am. J. Physiol. Regul. Integr. Comp. Physiol.
298: R1156-72 [PMID:20421634]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
V1A receptor
AVPR1A, P37288
V1B receptor
AVPR1B, P47901
V2 receptor
AVPR2, P30518
OT receptor
HGNC, UniProt
Rank order of
potency
Endogenous
agonists
Selective agonists
Antagonists
Selective
antagonists
Labelled ligands
OXTR, P30559
Comments: The V2 receptor exhibits marked species differences, such that many ligands (d(CH2 )5 [D-Ile2 ,Ile4 ]AVP and [3 H]desGly-NH2 [D-Ile2 ,Ile4 ]VP) exhibit low affinity at human V2 receptors [29]. Similarly,
[3 H]d[D-Arg8 ]VP is V2 selective in the rat, not in the human [1627]. The gene encoding the V2 receptor is polymorphic in man, underlying nephrogenic diabetes insipidus [148]. D[Cha4 ]AVP is selective only for
the human and bovine V1b receptors [415], while d[Leu4 ]LVP has high affinity for the rat V1b receptor [1485].
Further Reading
Bartz JA et al. (2011) Social effects of oxytocin in humans: context and person matter. Trends Cogn. Sci.
(Regul. Ed.) 15: 301-9 [PMID:21696997]
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S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
Nomenclature
PAC1 receptor
VPAC1 receptor
VPAC2 receptor
HGNC, UniProt
ADCYAP1R1, P41586
VIPR1, P32241
VIPR2, P41587
Selective agonists
Selective antagonists
Labelled ligands
Comments: Subtypes of PAC1 receptors have been proposed based on tissue differences in the potencies of PACAP-27 (ADCYAP1, P18509) and PACAP-38 (ADCYAP1, P18509); these might result from differences
in G protein coupling and second messenger mechanisms [1939], or from alternative splicing of PAC1 receptor mRNA [1788].
Further Reading
Harmar AJ et al. (1998) International Union of Pharmacology. XVIII. Nomenclature of receptors for vasoactive intestinal peptide and pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide. Pharmacol Rev 50:
265-270 [PMID:9647867]
Reglodi D et al. (2012) Effects of pituitary adenylate cyclase activating polypeptide in the urinary
system, with special emphasis on its protective effects in the kidney. Neuropeptides 46: 61-70
[PMID:21621841]
Harmar AJ et al. (2012) Pharmacology and functions of receptors for vasoactive intestinal peptide and
pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide: IUPHAR review 1. Br. J. Pharmacol. 166: 4-17
[PMID:22289055]
Smith CB et al. (2012) Is PACAP the major neurotransmitter for stress transduction at the adrenomedullary
synapse? J. Mol. Neurosci. 48: 403-12 [PMID:22610912]
S.P.H. Alexander et al. The Concise Guide to PHARMACOLOGY 2015/16: G protein-coupled receptors. British Journal of Pharmacology (2015) 172, 57445869
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