Parmodulins inhibit thrombus formation without inducing endothelial injury caused by vorapaxar

O Aisiku, CG Peters, K De Ceunynck… - Blood, The Journal …, 2015 - ashpublications.org
O Aisiku, CG Peters, K De Ceunynck, CC Ghosh, JR Dilks, SF Fustolo-Gunnink, M Huang
Blood, The Journal of the American Society of Hematology, 2015ashpublications.org
Abstract Protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR1) couples the coagulation cascade to platelet
activation during myocardial infarction and to endothelial inflammation during sepsis. This
receptor demonstrates marked signaling bias. Its activation by thrombin stimulates
prothrombotic and proinflammatory signaling, whereas its activation by activated protein C
(APC) stimulates cytoprotective and antiinflammatory signaling. A challenge in developing
PAR1-targeted therapies is to inhibit detrimental signaling while sparing beneficial …
Abstract
Protease-activated receptor-1 (PAR1) couples the coagulation cascade to platelet activation during myocardial infarction and to endothelial inflammation during sepsis. This receptor demonstrates marked signaling bias. Its activation by thrombin stimulates prothrombotic and proinflammatory signaling, whereas its activation by activated protein C (APC) stimulates cytoprotective and antiinflammatory signaling. A challenge in developing PAR1-targeted therapies is to inhibit detrimental signaling while sparing beneficial pathways. We now characterize a novel class of structurally unrelated small-molecule PAR1 antagonists, termed parmodulins, and compare the activity of these compounds to previously characterized compounds that act at the PAR1 ligand–binding site. We find that parmodulins target the cytoplasmic face of PAR1 without modifying the ligand-binding site, blocking signaling through Gαq but not Gα13 in vitro and thrombus formation in vivo. In endothelium, parmodulins inhibit prothrombotic and proinflammatory signaling without blocking APC-mediated pathways or inducing endothelial injury. In contrast, orthosteric PAR1 antagonists such as vorapaxar inhibit all signaling downstream of PAR1. Furthermore, exposure of endothelial cells to nanomolar concentrations of vorapaxar induces endothelial cell barrier dysfunction and apoptosis. These studies demonstrate how functionally selective antagonism can be achieved by targeting the cytoplasmic face of a G-protein–coupled receptor to selectively block pathologic signaling while preserving cytoprotective pathways.
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