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  2. Comparison between steroid binding to membrane progesterone receptor alpha (mPRalpha) and to nuclear progesterone receptor: correlation with physicochemical properties assessed by comparative molecular field analysis and identification of mPRalpha-specific agonists

Comparison between steroid binding to membrane progesterone receptor alpha (mPRalpha) and to nuclear progesterone receptor: correlation with physicochemical properties assessed by comparative molecular field analysis and identification of mPRalpha-specific agonists

  • Steroids. 2010 Apr;75(4-5):314-22. doi: 10.1016/j.steroids.2010.01.010.
Jan Kelder 1 Rita Azevedo Yefei Pang Jacob de Vlieg Jing Dong Peter Thomas
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Centre for Molecular and Biomolecular Informatics, Radboud University Nijmegen, Geert Grooteplein 26-28, 6525 GA Nijmegen, The Netherlands. [email protected]
Abstract

Recent results showing that the binding characteristics of 33 Steroids for human membrane Progesterone Receptor alpha (hu-mPRalpha) differ from those for the nuclear Progesterone Receptor (nPR) suggest that hu-mPRalpha-specific agonists can be identified for investigating its physiological functions. The binding affinities of an additional 21 Steroids for hu-mPRalpha were determined to explore the structure-activity relationships in more detail and to identify potent, specific mPRalpha agonists. Four synthetic progesterone derivatives with methyl or methylene groups on positions 18 or 19, 18a-methylprogesterone (18-CH(3)P4, Org OE 64-0), 13-ethenyl-18-norprogesterone (18-CH(2)P4, Org 33663-0), 19a-methylprogesterone (19-CH(3)P4, Org OD 13-0) and 10-ethenyl-19-norprogesterone (19-CH(2)P4, Org OD 02-0), showed similar or higher affinities than progesterone for hu-mPRalpha and displayed mPRalpha agonist activities in G-protein and MAP kinase activation assays. All four Steroids also bound to the nPR in cytosolic fractions of MCF-7 cells. However, two compounds, 19-CH(2)P4 and 19-CH(3)P4, showed no nPR agonist activity in a nPR reporter assay and therefore are selective mPRalpha agonists suitable for physiological investigations. The structure-binding relationships of the combined series of 54 Steroids for hu-mPRalpha deviated strikingly from those of a published set of 60 3-keto or 3-desoxy Steroids for nPR. Close correlations were observed between the receptor binding affinities of the Steroids and their physicochemical properties calculated by comparative molecular field analysis (CoMFA) for both hu-mPRalpha and nPR. A comparison of the CoMFA field graphs for the two receptors revealed several differences in the structural features required for binding to hu-mPRalpha and nPR which could be exploited to develop additional mPR-specific ligands.

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