DNA encoding a human dopamine D1 receptor and uses thereof

Chemistry: molecular biology and microbiology – Micro-organism – tissue cell culture or enzyme using process... – Recombinant dna technique included in method of making a...

Reexamination Certificate

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C530S350000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06468767

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Throughout this application various publications are referenced by full citations within parentheses. The disclosures of these publications in their entireties are hereby incorporated by reference in this application in order to more fully describe the state of the art to which this invention pertains.
Pharmacological studies, and more recently gene cloning, have established that multiple receptor subtypes exist for most, if not all, neurotransmitters. The existence of multiple receptor subtypes provides one mechanism by which a single neurotransmitter can elicit distinct cellular responses. The variation in cellular response can be achieved by the association of individual receptor subtypes with different G proteins and different signalling systems. Further flexibility is provided by the ability of distinct receptors for the same ligand to activate or inhibit the same second messenger system.
Individual receptor subtypes reveal characteristic differences in their abilities to bind a number of ligands, but the structural basis for the distinct ligand-binding properties is not known. Physiologists and pharmacologists have attempted to specify particular biological functions or anatomical locations for some receptor subtypes, but this has met with limited success. Similarly, the biochemical mechanisms by which these receptors transduce signals across the cell surface have been difficult to ascertain without having well-defined cell populations which express exclusively one receptor subtype.
Dopamine receptors have been classified into two subtypes, D
1
and D
2
, based on their differential affinities for dopamine agonists and antagonists, and their stimulation or inhibition of adenylate cyclase (for reviews, see Kebabian, J. W. and Calne, D. B. (1979), Nature 277, 93-96; Creese, I., Sibley, D. R., Hamblin, M. W., Leff, S. E. (1983), Ann. Rev. Neurosci. 6, 43-71; Niznik, H. B. and Jarvie, K. R. (1989), Dopamine receptors. in “Receptor Pharmacology and Function”, eds. Williams, M., Glennon, R., and Timmermans, P., Marcel Dekker Inc., New York, pp. 717-768). The D
1
receptor of the central nervous system is defined as an adenylate cyclase stimulatory receptor. The location-of the prototypic D
1
receptor is the bovine parathyroid gland, where dopamine agonists stimulate cAMP synthesis via adenylate cyclase, accompanied by parathyroid hormone release. Dopamine-stimulated adenylate cyclase activity and parathyroid hormone release are sensitive to both GTP and cholera toxin. This suggests that the D
1
receptor is associated with a G
s
guanine nucleotide binding protein. The D
2
receptor, in contrast, inhibits adenylate cyclase activity, and appears to be the primary target of most neuroleptic drugs (Niznik, H. B. and Jarvie, K. R. (1989). Dopamine receptors, in “Receptor Pharmacology and Function”, eds. Williams, M., Glennon, R., and Timmermans, P., Marcel Dekker Inc., New York, pp. 717-768). The prototypic D
2
receptor has been characterized in the anterior pituitary where it is associated with the inhibition of release of prolactin and alpha-melanocyte stimulating hormones. Recent work has shown that several different D
1
and D
2
receptor subtypes may be present in the mammalian nervous system (Andersen, P. H., Gingrich, J. A., Bates, M. D., Dearry, A., Falardeau, P., Senogles, S. E., and Caron, M. G. Trends in Pharmacolog. Sci. 11: 231 (1990)), which would suggest that a family of different proteins with pharmacological properties similar to the classically defined D
1
and D
2
receptors may exist.
Neuroleptics, in addition to their use as drugs to treat severe psychiatric illnesses, are high affinity ligands for dopamine receptors. Butyrophenones such as haloperidol and spiperone are antagonists specific for the D
2
receptor, while the recently developed benzazepines such as SCH-23390 and SKF-38393 are selective for the D
1
receptor (Niznik, H. B. and Jarvie, K. R. (1989), Dopamine receptors, in “Receptor Pharmacology and Function”, eds. Williams, M., Glennon, R., and Timmermans, P., Marcel Dekker Inc., New York, pp. 717-768). High affinity D
1
and D
2
selective ligands have conclusively distinguished these receptors and made feasible characterization of the receptors in the central nervous system and peripheral tissues with radioligand binding techniques. Two types of dopamine receptors, designated D
A1
and D
A2
, have been identified in the cardiovascular system and are similar in their pharmacological characteristics to the brain D
1
and D
2
receptors (Niznik, H. B. and Jarvie, K. R. (1989), Dopamine receptors, in “Receptor Pharmacology and Function”, eds. Williams, M., Glennon, R., and Timmermans, P., Marcel Dekker Inc., New York, pp. 717-768). D
A1
receptors have been described in renal, mesenteric, splenic, coronary, cerebral, and pulmonary arteries and vascular beds, where dopamine elicits relaxation of vascular smooth muscle. Activation of cardiovascular D
A1
receptors appears to stimulate adenylate cyclase activity. D
A2
receptors appear to be localized on preganglionic sympathetic nerve terminals that mediate inhibition of norepinephrine release. The molecular relationships among dopamine D
1
, D
2
, and D
A2
receptors are unknown.
The need for improved selectivity in the leading D
1
drug class, the benzazepines (e.g. SKF-38393, SCH-23390 and SCH-23982) recently became apparent when the strong cross-reactivity of these drugs with the serotonin 5-HT
2
receptor family was uncovered. The 5-HT
2
and 5-HT
1C
receptors display affinities ranging from 0.2 to 24 nM for SCH-23390 and SCH-23982 (Nicklaus, K. J., McGonigle, P., and Molinoff, P. B. (1988), J. Pharmacol. Exp. Ther. 247, 343-348; Hoyer, D. and Karpf, A. (1988), Eur. J. Pharmacol. 150, 181-184)), raising the possibility that behavioral and pharmacological effects ascribed to these drugs may, in fact, arise from serotonergic receptor interactions.
The dopamine D
1
receptors belong to a family of receptors which are distinguished by their seven-transmembrane configuration and their functional linkage to G-proteins. This family includes rhodopsin and related opsins (Nathans, J. and Hogness, D. S., Cell 34:807 (1983)), the &agr; and &bgr; adrenergic receptors (Dohlman, H. G., et al., Biochemistry 26:2657 (1987)), the muscarinic cholinergic receptors (Bonner, T. I., et al., Science 237:527 (1987)), the substance K neuropeptide receptor, (Masu, Y., et al., Nature 329:836 (1987)), the yeast mating factor receptors, (Burkholder, A. C. and Hartwell, L. H., Nucl. Acids Res. 13:8463(1985); Hagan, D. C., et al., Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA 83:1418 (1986)); Nakayama, N. et al., EMBO J. 4:2643 (1985)), and the oncogene c-mas, (Young, et al., Cell 45:711 (1986)). Each of these receptors is thought to transduce extracellular signals by interaction with guanine nucleotide-binding (G) proteins (Dohlman, H. G., et al., Biochemistry 26:2657 (1987); Dohlman, H. G., et al., Biochemistry 27:1813 (1988); O'Dowd, B. F., et al., Ann. Rev. Neurosci., in press).
The D
2
receptor was recently cloned by Civelli and colleagues (Bunzow, J. R., Van Tol, H. H. M., Grandy, D. K., Albert, P., Salon, J., Christie, M., Machida, C. A., Neve, K. A., and Civelli, O. (1989), Nature 336: 783-87). This event was soon followed by the discovery of an alternatively spliced form (termed D
2A
, D
2long
, D-2
in
, or D
2(444)
) that contains an additional 29 amino acids in the third extracellular loop of this receptor (Eidne, K. A. et al. (1989), Nature 342: 865; Giros, B. et al. (1989), Nature 342: 923-26; Grandy, D. K. et al. (1989),
Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. USA
86: 9762-66; Monsma, F. J. et al. (1989), Nature 342: 926-29; Chio, C. L. et al. (1990), Nature 343: 266-69; Stormann, T. M. et al. (1990), Mol. Pharmacol. 37: 1-6). A second dopamine receptor has been cloned which exhibits significant homology to the D
2
receptor, both in amino acid sequence (75% transmembrane region identity) and in pharmacological properties (Sokoloff, P. et al. (1990), Nature 347: 146-51). This new receptor, termed D
3
, is enco

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