PROJECT SUMMARY
Protease-activated receptors (PARs) are G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) with a unique mode of activation
involving the cleavage of the N-terminus of the receptor by various proteases. Among numerous activities, PARs
play a vital role in the activation of platelet cells in hemostasis, as well as regulating immune responses in
endothelial and immune cells. The pleiotropic effects mediated by PARs are governed by signaling pathways
involving different G proteins and B-arrestins, and evidence has accumulated with PARs, and GPCRs in general,
that different ligands can bias their balance of signals in beneficial ways that could lead to safer and more
effective drugs. In previous years, we identified a new class of PAR1 ligands (called parmodulins) that have been
found to be allosteric and biased ligands for PAR1. Unusually, we have found that they are effective inhibitors of
platelet activation, but can also induce protective effects in endothelial and other cell types that may have broad
applications to the treatment of inflammation-related disorders.
This proposal aims to continue our efforts to discover new and improved parmodulins and to determine their
precise intracellular signaling pathways. In Aim 1, libraries of compounds with a relatively unexplored
heterocyclic scaffold will be prepared, potentially using a multistep one pot synthesis from readily available
building blocks. In Aim 2, novel PAR1 G protein and B-arrestin assays will be developed in collaboration with Dr.
John McCorvy (Medical College of Wisconsin), with a focus on the use of G protein-BRET sensors to elucidate
which of the numerous G proteins may contribute to the protective signaling of parmodulins. A high throughput
assay measuring phospho-Akt formation in endothelial cells will also be validated, which is relevant to the
protective effects of parmodulins. In Aim 3, these assays will be used to characterize the novel analogs of Aim
1 in an iterative fashion, and to define structure-activity and structure-functional selectivity relationships (SARs
and SFSRs) of these parmodulins. In collaboration with Dr. Hartmut Weiler (Blood Research Institute), select
compounds will undergo more detailed study to characterize their utility as anti-inflammatory and cytoprotective
compounds. Certain parmodulins will also be subjected to standard profiling experiments to identify compounds
with safety, stability, and selectivity profiles suitable for future in vivo studies.