@article {PerszykMOLPHARM-AR-2020-000218, author = {Riley E. Perszyk and Zhaoshi Zheng and Tue G. Banke and Jing Zhang and Lingling Xie and Miranda J. McDaniel and Brooke M. Katzman and Stephen C. Pelly and Hongjie Yuan and Dennis C. Liotta and Stephen F. Traynelis}, title = {The Negative Allosteric Modulator EU1794-4 Reduces Single Channel Conductance and Ca2+ Permeability of GluN1/GluN2A NMDA Receptors}, elocation-id = {MOLPHARM-AR-2020-000218}, year = {2021}, doi = {10.1124/molpharm.120.000218}, publisher = {American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics}, abstract = {NMDA receptors are ligand-gated ion channels that mediate a slow, Ca2+-permeable component of excitatory synaptic currents. These receptors are involved in several important brain functions, including learning and memory, and have also been implicated in neuropathological conditions and acute CNS injury, which has driven therapeutic interest in their modulation. The EU1794 series of positive and negative allosteric modulators of NMDA receptors has structural determinants of action near the pre-M1 helix that is involved in channel gating. Here we describe the effects of the negative allosteric modulator EU1794-4 on GluN1/GluN2A channels studied in excised outside-out patches. Co-application of EU1794-4 with a maximally effective concentration of glutamate and glycine increases the fraction of time the channel is open by nearly 1.5-fold, yet reduces single channel conductance by increasing access of the channel to several subconductance levels, which has the net overall effect of reducing the macroscopic current. The lack of voltage-dependence of negative modulation suggests this is unrelated to a channel block mechanism. As seen with other NMDA receptor modulators that reduce channel conductance, EU1794-4 also reduces the Ca2+ permeability relative to monovalent cations of GluN1/GluN2A receptors. We conclude that EU1794-4 is a prototype for a new class of NMDA receptor negative allosteric modulators that reduce both the overall current that flows following receptor activation and the flux of Ca2+ ion relative to monovalent cations. Significance Statement NMDA receptors are implicated in many neurological conditions but are challenging to target given their ubiquitous expression. Several newly identified properties of the negative allosteric modulator EU1794-4, including reducing Ca2+ flux through NMDA receptors and attenuating channel conductance, explain why this modulator reduces but does not eliminate NMDA receptor function. A modulator with these properties could have therapeutic advantages for indications in which attenuation of NMDA receptor function is beneficial, such as neurodegenerative disease and acute injury.}, issn = {0026-895X}, URL = {https://molpharm.aspetjournals.org/content/early/2021/03/08/molpharm.120.000218}, eprint = {https://molpharm.aspetjournals.org/content/early/2021/03/08/molpharm.120.000218.full.pdf}, journal = {Molecular Pharmacology} }