Two small molecule agonists of glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor modulate the receptor activation response differently.
Biochem Biophys Res Commun · 2012
Last updated 2026-05-28Two small-molecule drugs, compound 2 and compound B, were tested as potential treatments for type 2 diabetes by targeting the GLP-1 receptor. Compound 2 shifted the response curve of natural and synthetic peptide drugs without changing their maximum effect, while compound B both increased the response and raised the maximum effect. The two compounds also interacted differently with other drugs and affected calcium levels in cells in distinct ways, suggesting they activate the receptor through different mechanisms.
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| Journal | Biochem Biophys Res Commun, 2012 |
|---|---|
| Citations | 14 |
| Relative citation ratio | 0.44 |
| NIH percentile | 26 |
| Molecules | — |
| Conditions studied | Type 2 Diabetes, Obesity |
Abstract
The glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) is a target for type 2 diabetes treatment. Due to the inconvenience of peptide therapeutics, small-molecule GLP-1R agonists have been studied. Compound 2 (6,7-dichloro-2-methylsulfonyl-2-N-tert-butylaminoquinoxaline) and compound B (4-(3-(benzyloxy)phenyl)-2-(ethylsulfinyl)-6-(trifluoromethyl)pyrimidine) have been described as small molecule, ago-allosteric modulators of GLP-1R. However, their modes of action at the GLP-1R have not been elucidated. Thus, in this study, we compared the mechanisms of action between these two compounds. When compound 2 was treated with endogenous or exogenous peptide agonists (GLP-1 and exenatide) or fragments of peptide agonists (GLP-1(9-36), Ex3, Ex4, and Ex5), the response curve of these peptide agonists shifted left without a change in maximum efficacy. In contrast, compound B potentiated the response and increased maximum efficacy. However, N-terminal truncated orthosteric antagonists including Ex7, Ex9, and Ex10, augmented the response of compound 2 at the GLP-1R but did not alter compound B activity. Intriguingly, when we co-treated compound 2 with compound B in CHO cells expressing full-length hGLP-1R or N-terminal extracellular domain-truncated GLP-1R, the activation of both types of receptors increased additively, implying that the N-terminus of the receptor is not involved in the modulation by compound agonists. We confirmed that these two compounds increased calcium influx by different patterns in CHO cells expressing GLP-1R. Taken together, our findings suggest that compounds 2 and B have different modes of action to activate GLP-1R. Further study to identify the putative binding sites will help in the discovery of orally available GLP-1R agonists.
Verbatim abstract via PubMed 22177947 ↗