Fluorescence activation mechanism and imaging of drug permeation with new sensors for smoking-cessation ligands.
Aaron L NicholsZack BlumenfeldChengcheng FanLaura LuebbertAnnet E M BlomBruce N CohenJonathan S MarvinPhilip M BordenCharlene H KimAnand K MuthusamyAmol V ShivangeHailey J KnoxHugo Rego CampelloJonathan H WangDennis A DoughertyLoren L LoogerTimothy GallagherDouglas C ReesHenry A LesterPublished in: eLife (2022)
Nicotinic partial agonists provide an accepted aid for smoking cessation and thus contribute to decreasing tobacco-related disease. Improved drugs constitute a continued area of study. However, there remains no reductionist method to examine the cellular and subcellular pharmacokinetic properties of these compounds in living cells. Here, we developed new intensity-based drug-sensing fluorescent reporters (iDrugSnFRs) for the nicotinic partial agonists dianicline, cytisine, and two cytisine derivatives - 10-fluorocytisine and 9-bromo-10-ethylcytisine. We report the first atomic-scale structures of liganded periplasmic binding protein-based biosensors, accelerating development of iDrugSnFRs and also explaining the activation mechanism. The nicotinic iDrugSnFRs detect their drug partners in solution, as well as at the plasma membrane (PM) and in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) of cell lines and mouse hippocampal neurons. At the PM, the speed of solution changes limits the growth and decay rates of the fluorescence response in almost all cases. In contrast, we found that rates of membrane crossing differ among these nicotinic drugs by >30-fold. The new nicotinic iDrugSnFRs provide insight into the real-time pharmacokinetic properties of nicotinic agonists and provide a methodology whereby iDrugSnFRs can inform both pharmaceutical neuroscience and addiction neuroscience.
Keyphrases
- smoking cessation
- living cells
- endoplasmic reticulum
- replacement therapy
- single molecule
- high resolution
- binding protein
- fluorescent probe
- drug induced
- air pollution
- particulate matter
- magnetic resonance
- spinal cord
- mass spectrometry
- hepatitis c virus
- high intensity
- magnetic resonance imaging
- polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons
- quantum dots
- electronic health record
- risk assessment
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- water soluble
- cerebral ischemia
- hiv infected
- estrogen receptor
- antiretroviral therapy