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Dive into the research topics where Anders A. Jensen is active.

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Featured researches published by Anders A. Jensen.


Current Drug Targets | 2007

Structure, pharmacology and therapeutic prospects of family C G-protein coupled receptors.

Hans Bräuner-Osborne; Petrine Wellendorph; Anders A. Jensen

Family C of G-protein coupled receptors (GPCRs) from humans is constituted by eight metabotropic glutamate (mGlu(1-8)) receptors, two heterodimeric gamma-aminobutyric acid(B) (GABA(B)) receptors, a calcium-sensing receptor (CaR), three taste (T1R) receptors, a promiscuous L-alpha-amino acid receptor (GPRC6A), and five orphan receptors. Aside from the orphan receptors, the family C GPCRs are characterised by a large amino-terminal domain, which bind the endogenous orthosteric agonists. Recently, a number of allosteric modulators binding to the seven transmembrane domains of the receptors have also been reported. Family C GPCRs regulate a number of important physiological functions and are thus intensively pursued as drug targets. So far, two drugs acting at family C receptors (the GABA(B) agonist baclofen and the positive allosteric CaR modulator cinacalcet) have been marketed. Cinacalcet is the first allosteric GPCR modulator to enter the market, which demonstrates that the therapeutic principle of allosteric modulation can also be extended to this important drug target class. In this review we outline the structure and function of family C GPCRs with particular focus on the ligand binding sites, and we present the most important pharmacological agents and the therapeutic prospects of the receptors.


Journal of Biological Chemistry | 1999

The Agonist-binding Domain of the Calcium-sensing Receptor Is Located at the Amino-terminal Domain

Hans Bräuner-Osborne; Anders A. Jensen; Paul O. Sheppard; Patrick J. O'Hara; Povl Krogsgaard-Larsen

The calcium-sensing receptor (CaR) is a G-protein-coupled receptor that displays 19–25% sequence identity to the γ-aminobutyric acid type B (GABAB) and metabotropic glutamate (mGlu) receptors. All three groups of receptors have a large amino-terminal domain (ATD), which for the mGlu receptors has been shown to bind the endogenous agonist. To investigate whether the agonist-binding domain of the CaR also is located in the ATD, we constructed a chimeric receptor named Ca/1a consisting of the ATD of CaR and the seven transmembrane region and C terminus of mGlu1a. The Ca/1a receptor stimulated inositol phosphate production when exposed to the cationic agonists Ca2+, Mg2+, and Ba2+ in transiently transfected tsA cells (a transformed HEK 293 cell line). The pharmacological profile of Ca/1a (EC50 values of 3.3, 2.6, and 3.9 mm for these cations, respectively) was very similar to that of the wild-type CaR (EC50 values of 3.2, 4.7, and 4.1 mm, respectively). For the mGlu1a receptor, it has been shown that Ser-165 and Thr-188, which are located in the ATD, are involved in the agonist binding. An alignment of CaR with the mGlu receptors showed that these two amino acid residues have been conserved in CaR as Ser-147 and Ser-170, respectively. Each of these residues was mutated to alanines and tested pharmacologically using the endogenous agonist Ca2+. CaR-S147A showed an impaired function as compared with wild-type CaR both with respect to potency of Ca2+(4-fold increase in EC50) and maximal response (79% of wild-type response). CaR-S170A showed no significant response to Ca2+ even at 50 mm concentration. In contrast, each of the two adjacent mutations, S169A and S171A, resulted in pharmacological profiles almost identical to that of the wild-type receptor. These data demonstrate that Ser-170 and to some extent Ser-147 are involved in the Ca2+ activation of the CaR, and taken together, our results reveal a close resemblance of the activation mechanism between the CaR and the mGlu receptors.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2010

Structure-activity relationship study of first selective inhibitor of excitatory amino acid transporter subtype 1: 2-Amino-4-(4-methoxyphenyl)-7-(naphthalen-1-yl)-5-oxo-5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-4H-chromene-3-carbonitrile (UCPH-101).

Mette N. Erichsen; Tri H. V. Huynh; Bjarke Abrahamsen; Jesper F. Bastlund; Christoffer Bundgaard; Olja Monrad; Anders Bekker-Jensen; Christina W. Nielsen; Karla Frydenvang; Anders A. Jensen; Lennart Bunch

The excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) are expressed throughout the central nervous system, where they are responsible for the reuptake of the excitatory neurotransmitter (S)-glutamate (Glu). (1) Recently, we have reported the discovery of the first subtype selective EAAT1 inhibitor 2-amino-4-(4-methoxyphenyl)-7-(naphthalen-1-yl)-5-oxo-5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-4H-chromene-3-carbonitrile (UCPH-101) (1b) and presented an introductory structure-activity relationship (SAR) study. (2) Here, we present a detailed SAR by the design, synthesis, and pharmacological evaluation of analogues 1g-1t. By comparison of potencies of 1b, 1h, and 1i versus 1j, it is evident that potency is largely influenced by the chemical nature of the R(1) substituent. The study also demonstrates that any chemical change of the functional groups or a change to the parental scaffold results in the complete loss of inhibitory activity of the compounds at EAAT1. Finally, a bioavailability study of UCPH-101 determined the half-life to be 30 min in serum (rats) but also that it was not able to penetrate the blood-brain barrier to any significant degree.


Biochimica et Biophysica Acta | 2001

Cloning and characterization of a human orphan family C G-protein coupled receptor GPRC5D

Hans Bräuner-Osborne; Anders A. Jensen; Paul O. Sheppard; Birger Brodin; Povl Krogsgaard-Larsen; Patrick O’Hara

Recently three orphan G-protein coupled receptors, RAIG1, GPRC5B and GPRC5C, with homology to members of family C (metabotropic glutamate receptor-like) have been identified. Using the protein sequences of these receptors as queries we identified overlapping expressed sequence tags which were predicted to encode an additional subtype. The full length coding regions of mouse mGprc5d and human GPRC5D were cloned and shown to contain predicted open reading frames of 300 and 345 amino acids, respectively. GPRC5D has seven putative transmembrane segments and is expressed in the cell membrane. The four human receptor subtypes, which we assign to group 5 of family C GPCRs, show 31-42% amino acid sequence identity to each other and 20-25% sequence identity to the transmembrane domains of metabotropic glutamate receptor subtypes 2 and 3 and other family C members. In contrast to the remaining family C members, the group 5 receptors have short amino terminal domains of some 30-50 amino acids. GPRC5D was shown to be clustered with RAIG1 on chromosome 12p13.3 and like RAIG1 and GPRC5B to consist of three exons, the first exon being the largest containing all seven transmembrane segments. GPRC5D mRNA is widely expressed in the peripheral system but all four receptors show distinct expression patterns. Interestingly, mRNA levels of all four group 5 receptors were found in medium to high levels in the kidney, pancreas and prostate and in low to medium levels in the colon and the small intestine, whereas other organs only express a subset of the genes. In an attempt to delineate the signal transduction pathway(s) of the orphan receptors, a series of chimeric receptors containing the amino terminal domain of the calcium sensing receptor or metabotropic glutamate receptor subtype 1, and the seven transmembrane domain of the orphan receptors were constructed and tested in binding and functional assays.


Expert Opinion on Therapeutic Targets | 2009

Excitatory amino acid transporters as potential drug targets

Lennart Bunch; Mette N. Erichsen; Anders A. Jensen

Background: Excitatory amino acid transporters (EAATs) are transmembrane proteins responsible for the uptake of (S)-glutamate (Glu) from the synaptic cleft, thereby terminating the glutamatergic neurotransmitter signal. Today five subtypes have been identified. Except for EAAT2, their individual roles or functions in the CNS are yet to be fully understood due to the shortage of subtype-selective ligands. Objective/methods: We examine the latest developments in this field by addressing EAAT expression pattern, localization and pharmacology. We present highlights of published work on inhibitors as well as enhancers which display subtype preference or selectivity and discuss which pathological conditions in the CNS such ligands may be beneficial to. Results/conclusions: Not until subtype-selective enhancers, inhibitors and substrates for all five EAAT subtypes have been discovered can a full and detailed understanding of EAATs be obtained. Thus we encourage collaboration between organic chemists and molecular pharmacologists, who, together, may pave the way for new EAAT ligands of importance.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2009

Discovery of the First Selective Inhibitor of Excitatory Amino Acid Transporter Subtype 1

Anders A. Jensen; Mette N. Erichsen; Christina W. Nielsen; Tine B. Stensbøl; Jan Kehler; Lennart Bunch

The discovery of the first class of subtype-selective inhibitors of the human excitatory amino acid transporter subtype 1 (EAAT1) and its rat orthologue GLAST is reported. An opening structure-activity relationship of 25 analogues is presented that addresses the influence of substitutions at the 4- and 7-positions of the parental skeleton 2-amino-5-oxo-5,6,7,8-tetrahydro-4H-chromene-3-carbonitrile. The most potent analogue 1o displays high nanomolar inhibitory activity at EAAT1 and a >400-fold selectivity over EAAT2 and EAAT3, making it a highly valuable pharmacological tool.


Trends in Pharmacological Sciences | 2008

3B but which 3B? And that's just one of the questions : the heterogeneity of human 5-HT3 receptors

Anders A. Jensen; Paul Davies; Hans Bräuner-Osborne; Karen Krzywkowski

The 5-hydroxytryptamine 3 (5-HT3) receptor is expressed widely in the central and peripheral nervous systems, where it mediates or modulates a wide range of physiological processes. The receptor is targeted by drugs administered for nausea and/or emesis and irritable bowel syndrome and has been proposed as a potential drug target in various psychiatric disorders. The 5-HT3 receptor is a pentameric ligand-gated ion channel and belongs to the Cys-loop receptor family. In contrast to the immense heterogeneity characterizing other Cysloop receptors, native 5-HT3 receptors historically have been considered a much more homogenous receptor population. However, the recent discovery of additional 5-HT3 subunits and the dawning realization that central and peripheral 5-HT3 receptor populations might comprise several subtypes characterized by distinct functional properties has emphasized the complexity of human 5-HT3 receptor signaling. In this review potential implications of these findings and of the entirely new layer of interindividual diversity introduced to the 5-HT3 receptor system by genetic variations will be outlined.


Journal of Molecular Endocrinology | 2008

No evidence for a bone phenotype in GPRC6A knockout mice under normal physiological conditions

Petrine Wellendorph; Lars Dan Johansen; Anders A. Jensen; Emilio Casanova; Martin Gassmann; Pierre Deprez; Philippe Clément-Lacroix; Bernhard Bettler; Hans Bräuner-Osborne

GPRC6A is a seven-transmembrane receptor mediating signaling by a wide range of L-alpha-amino acids, a signaling augmented by the divalent cations Ca(2)(+) and Mg(2)(+). GPRC6A transcripts are detected in numerous mammalian tissues, but the physiological role of the receptor is thus far elusive. Analogously to the closely related calcium-sensing receptor, GPRC6A has been proposed to function as a metabolic sensor of Ca(2)(+) and amino acids in bone and other tissues. In the present study, we have generated the first GPRC6A knockout mice and studied their phenotype with particular focus on bone homeostasis. The generated GPRC6A knockout mice are viable and fertile, develop normally, and exhibit no significant differences in body weight compared with wild-type littermates. Assessment of bone mineral density, histomorphometry, and bone metabolism demonstrated no significant differences between 13-week-old knockout and wild-type mice. In conclusion, our data do not support a role for GPRC6A in normal bone physiology.


Current Opinion in Pharmacology | 2015

Excitatory amino acid transporters: recent insights into molecular mechanisms, novel modes of modulation and new therapeutic possibilities.

Anders A. Jensen; Christoph Fahlke; Walden E. Bjørn-Yoshimoto; Lennart Bunch

The five excitatory amino acid transporters (EAAT1-5) mediating the synaptic uptake of the major excitatory neurotransmitter glutamate are differently expressed throughout the CNS and at the synaptic level. Although EAATs are crucial for normal excitatory neurotransmission, explorations into the physiological functions mediated by the different transporter subtypes and their respective therapeutic potential have so far been sparse, in no small part due to the limited selection of pharmacological tools available. In the present update, we outline important new insights into the molecular compositions of EAATs and their intricate transport process, the novel approaches to pharmacological modulation of the transporters that have emerged, and interesting new perspectives in EAAT as drug targets proposed in recent years.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2008

High-frequency HTR3B variant associated with major depression dramatically augments the signaling of the human 5-HT3AB receptor

Karen Krzywkowski; Paul Davies; Paula L. Feinberg-Zadek; Hans Bräuner-Osborne; Anders A. Jensen

The 5-hydroxytryptamine-3 (5-HT3) receptor mediates the fast excitatory neurotransmission of serotonin and is known to mediate the nausea/emesis induced by radio/chemotherapy and anesthetics. A polymorphism encoding the variation Y129S in the 5-HT3B subunit exists in high frequency in the general population and has been shown to be inversely correlated to the incidence of major depression in women. We show that 5-HT3AB(Y129S) receptors exhibit a substantially increased maximal response to serotonin compared with WT receptors in two fluorescence-based cellular assays. In electrophysiological recordings, the deactivation and desensitization kinetics of the 5-HT3AB(Y129S) receptor are 20- and 10-fold slower, respectively, than those of the WT receptor. Single-channel measurements reveal a 7-fold-increased mean open time of 5-HT3AB(Y129S) receptors compared with WT receptors. The augmented signaling displayed by 5-HT3AB(Y129S) receptors may confer protection against the development of depression. The variant also may influence the development and/or treatment of nausea and other disorders involving 5-HT3 receptors. Thus, the impact of the high-frequency variant 5-HT3B(Y129S) on 5-HT3AB receptor signaling calls for a search for additional phenotypes, and the variant may thus aid in establishing the role of the 5-HT3AB receptor in pathophysiology.

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Lennart Bunch

University of Copenhagen

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