https://d3n8a8pro7vhmx.cloudfront.net/americankratomassociation/pages/21/attachments/original/1467415534/Journal_Of_The_American_Chemical_Society_6-6-16_Report.pdf?1467415534
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ABSTRACT: Mu-opioid receptor agonists represent mainstays of pain management. However, the therapeutic use of these
agents is associated with serious side effects, including potentially lethal respiratory depression. Accordingly, there is a
longstanding interest in the development of new opioid analgesics with improved therapeutic profiles. The alkaloids of the
Southeast Asian plant Mitragyna speciosa, represented by the prototypical member mitragynine, are an unusual class of opioid
receptor modulators with distinct pharmacological properties. Here we describe the first receptor-level functional characterization
of mitragynine and related natural alkaloids at the human mu-, kappa-, and delta-opioid receptors. These results show that
mitragynine and the oxidized analogue 7-hydroxymitragynine, are partial agonists of the human mu-opioid receptor and
competitive antagonists at the kappa- and delta-opioid receptors. We also show that mitragynine and 7-hydroxymitragynine are
G-protein-biased agonists of the mu-opioid receptor, which do not recruit β-arrestin following receptor activation. Therefore, the
Mitragyna alkaloid scaffold represents a novel framework for the development of functionally biased opioid modulators, which
may exhibit improved therapeutic profiles. Also presented is an enantioselective total synthesis of both (−)-mitragynine and its
unnatural enantiomer, (+)-mitragynine, employing a proline-catalyzed Mannich−Michael reaction sequence as the key
transformation. Pharmacological evaluation of (+)-mitragynine revealed its much weaker opioid activity. Likewise, the
intermediates and chemical transformations developed in the total synthesis allowed the elucidation of previously unexplored
structure−activity relationships (SAR) within the Mitragyna scaffold. Molecular docking studies, in combination with the
observed chemical SAR, suggest that Mitragyna alkaloids adopt a binding pose at the mu-opioid receptor that is distinct from that
of classical opioids.
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