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G protein-coupled receptor research looks out for new technologies to elucidate the complex
processes of receptor activation, function and downstream signaling with spatiotemporal
resolution, preferably in living cells and organisms. A thriving approach consists in making use
of the unsurpassed properties of light, including its high precision in space and time, noninvasiveness
and high degree of orthogonality regarding biological processes. This is realized
by the incorporation of molecular photoswitches, which are able to effectively respond to light,
such as azobenzene, into the structure of a ligand of a given receptor. The muscarinic
acetylcholine receptors belong to class A GPCRs and have received special attention in this
regard due to their role as a prototypic pharmacological system and their therapeutic potential.
They mediate the excitatory and inhibitory effects of the neurotransmitter acetylcholine and
thus regulate diverse important biological processes, especially many neurological functions in
our brain.
In this work, the application of photopharmacological tool compounds to muscarinic receptors
is presented, consisting of pharmacophores extended with azobenzene as light-responsive
motif. Making use of the dualsteric concept, such photochromic ligands can be designed to bind
concomitantly to the orthosteric and allosteric binding site of the receptor, which is
demonstrated for BQCAAI (M1) and PAI (M2) and may lead to subtype- and functionalselective
photoswitchable ligands, suitable for further ex vivo and in vivo studies.
Moreover, photoswitchable ligands based on the synthetic agonist iperoxo were investigated
extensively with regard to their photochemical behavior and pharmacological profile, outlining
the advantages and challenges of using red-shifted molecular photoswitches, such as tetraortho-
fluoro azobenzene. For the first time on a GPCR it was examined, which impact the
different substitution pattern has on both the binding and the activity on the M1 receptor. Results
show that substituted azobenzenes in photopharmacological compounds (F4-photoiperoxo and
F4-iper-azo-iper) not just represent analogs with other photophysical properties but can exhibit
a considerably different biological profile that has to be investigated carefully.
The achievements gained in this study can give important new insights into the binding mode
and time course of activation processes, enabling precise spatial and temporal resolution of the
complex signaling pathway of muscarinic receptors. Due to their role as exemplary model
system, these findings may be useful for the investigation into other therapeutically relevant
GPCRs.