News and Publications
Press Release
How Do You Solve Relief - Structure of Pain-Modulating Enzyme Described
by Scientists at The Scripps Research Institute
La Jolla, CA. November 28, 2002 - A group of researchers from The Scripps
Research Institute (TSRI) have solved the structure of an enzyme that modulates
central nervous system (CNS) functions such as pain perception, cognition, feeding,
sleep, and locomotor activity.
The enzyme, described in the latest issue of the journal Science,
is called fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH), and it breaks down certain fatty
signaling molecules that reside in the lipid membranes of CNS cells. The TSRI
group reports that FAAH modulates the action of these fatty signaling molecules
through an unusual mechanism of action whereby it scoops them out of the cell
membranes and chews them up.
"I envision that if someone could make a specific inhibitor to FAAH, you
could, in principal, get pain relief without any of the side effects," says Benjamin
Cravatt, one of the paper's lead authors and an investigator in TSRI's Department
of Cell Biology, Department of Chemistry, and The Skaggs Institute for Chemical
Biology.
"As soon as we had the view of the active site, we knew FAAH could be used
to make lead clinical candidates," adds Raymond Stevens, who is a professor in
the Department of Molecular Biology and Chemistry at TSRI and the other lead
author on the paper. "The deep pocket with well-defined cavities provides the
guidance to take the currently available tight binding inhibitors and improve
on their specificity and pharmakokinetic properties."
Pain Management and FAAH
Easing pain is practically synonymous with practicing medicine, and since
before the days of Hippocrates, doctors have sought the best ways of doing this - looking
for compounds that not only ease pain, but do so as fast, effectively, and lastingly
as possible - and without any unwanted side effects.
Every analgesic, from opiates to hypnotism to electroshocks to balms, have
side effects, and therein lies the rubwhether relieving the pain or the side
effects is more pressing.
One compound that has been hotly debated in the last 10 years is delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol
(THC), the active ingredient in marijuana. The reason THC works is that it mimics
the action of natural cannabinoids that the body produces in signaling cascades
in response to a peripheral pain stimulus. THC binds to "CB-1" receptors on cells
on the rostral ventromedial medulla, a pain-modulating center of the brain, decreasing
sensitivity to pain.
Unfortunately, the receptors that THC bind to are also widely expressed in
other parts of the brain, such as in the memory and information-processing centers
of the hippocampus. Binding to nerve cells of the hippocampus and other cells
elsewhere in the body, THC creates a range of side effects as it activates CB-1
mediated signaling - including distorted perception, difficulty in problem-solving,
loss of coordination, and increased heart rate and blood pressure, anxiety, and
panic attacks.
The challenge posed by THC and other cannabinoids is to find a way to use
them to produce effective, long-lasting relief from pain without the deleterious
side effects. Now Cravatt and Stevens think they know just how to do that.
The solution, as they see it, is to increase the efficacy of the natural,
endogenous cannabinoids ("endocannabinoids") the body produces to modulate pain
sensations.
"When you feel pain, you release endocannabinoids [which provide some natural
pain relief]," says Cravatt. "Then the amplitude and duration of their activity
are regulated by how fast they are broken down."
In particular, the body releases an endogenous cannabinoid called anandamide,
a name derived from the Sanskrit word meaning "internal bliss." When the body
senses pain, anandamide binds to CB-1 and nullifies pain by blocking the signaling.
However, this effect is weak and short-lived as FAAH quickly metabolizes the
anandamide - the compound has a half-life of only a few minutes in vivo.
In some ways, THC is superior to anandamide as a pain reliever because it
is not as readily metabolized by FAAH. But THC goes on to suppress cannabinoid
receptor activity all over the body. This, coupled with the fact that it is a
controlled substance, makes THC an unattractive target for developing therapeutics.
FAAH is much more attractive target for pain therapy because by inhibiting
FAAH, you would increase the longevity of anandamide molecules - preventing
their breakdown and allowing them to continue providing some natural pain relief.
The structure that Cravatt, Stevens, and their TSRI colleagues solved should
form a template for designing specific inhibitors that control the action of
FAAH when the body is sensing pain and releasing anandamide.
The research article, "Structural Adaptations in a Membrane Enzyme that Terminates
Endocannabinoid Signaling" is authored by Michael H. Bracey, Michael A. Hanson,
Kim R. Masuda, Raymond C. Stevens, and Benjamin F. Cravatt, and appears in the
November 29, 2002 issue of the journal Science.
The research was funded by the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the Searle
Scholars Program, The Skaggs Institute for Research, a National Research Service
Award, and a Jabinson graduate fellowship.
For more information contact:
Jason Bardi
10550 North Torrey Pines Road
La Jolla, California 92037
Tel: 858.784.9254
Fax: 858.784.8118
jasonb@scripps.edu
Copyright © 2002 TSRI.
All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission of TSRI is prohibited.
|