A selective progesterone receptor modulator (SPRM) is an agent that acts on the progesterone receptor. A characteristic that distinguishes such substances from receptor full agonists (such as progesterone) and full antagonists (such as RU 486) is that their action differs in different tissues (agonist in some while antagonist in others). This mixed agonist/agonist profile of action leads to selective stimulation or inhibition progesterone-like action in different tissues and furthermore raises the possibility of dissociation of desirable therapeutic effects from undesirable side effects in synthetic progesterone receptor drug candidates.[1]
Members include:
SPRMs are in limited use:
Synthetic SPRMs differ in chemical structure from the endogenous hormone progesterone, but nevertheless bind to the same progesterone receptor. In humans, there is only one gene (PGR) that codes for the receptor, but two splice variants (PR-A and -B) arising from this single gene each with a somewhat different tissue distribution and intrinsic functional activity in response to ligand binding (agonist vs. antagonist). In addition, synthetic SPRMs may have some binding selectivity between the two isoforms, although this is unlikely as the ligand binding domains of the two isoforms are identical.
A more likely origin of the tissue selectivity of SPRMs is what conformational preference these ligands induce in the receptor. The ligand binding domain of the receptor is in equilibrium between two different conformations. The first is an agonist conformation which favors the binding of coactivator proteins which in turn favors upregulation of gene transcription. The second is an antagonistic conformation which in contrast favors the binding of corepressors and as a consequence down regulation of gene expression. Full agonists such as progesterone which display agonist properties in all tissues, strongly shift the conformational equilibrium in the agonist direction. Conversely full antagonists such as RU-486 strongly shift the equilibrium in the antagonist direction. Finally, the overall ratio of concentrations of coactivator to corepressor may differ in different cell types.
When SPRMs bind to the progesterone receptor, the equilibrium between the two conformational states is more closely balanced and hence more easily perturbed by differences in the cellular environment. In tissues where the concentration of coactivators is higher than corepressors, the excess coactivators drive the equilibrium in the agonist direction. Conversely in tissues where corepressor concentration is higher the equilibrium is driven in the antagonist direction.[2][3] Hence SPRMs display agonist activity in tissues where coactivators predominate and antagonist activity where corepressors are in excess.