| Literature DB >> 25050159 |
Shuwen He1, Zhong Lai1, Zhixiong Ye1, Peter H Dobbelaar1, Shrenik K Shah1, Quang Truong1, Wu Du1, Liangqin Guo1, Jian Liu1, Tianying Jian1, Hongbo Qi1, Raman K Bakshi1, Qingmei Hong1, James Dellureficio1, Mikhail Reibarkh1, Koppara Samuel1, Vijay B Reddy1, Stan Mitelman1, Sharon X Tong1, Gary G Chicchi1, Kwei-Lan Tsao1, Dorina Trusca1, Margaret Wu1, Qing Shao1, Maria E Trujillo1, Guillermo Fernandez2, Donald Nelson2, Patricia Bunting2, Janet Kerr2, Patrick Fitzgerald2, Pierre Morissette2, Sylvia Volksdorf2, George J Eiermann1, Cai Li1, Bei Zhang1, Andrew D Howard1, Yun-Ping Zhou1, Ravi P Nargund1, William K Hagmann1.
Abstract
Antagonism of somatostatin subtype receptor 3 (sstr3) has emerged as a potential treatment of Type 2 diabetes. Unfortunately, the development of our first preclinical candidate, MK-4256, was discontinued due to a dose-dependent QTc (QT interval corrected for heart rate) prolongation observed in a conscious cardiovascular (CV) dog model. As the fate of the entire program rested on resolving this issue, it was imperative to determine whether the observed QTc prolongation was associated with hERG channel (the protein encoded by the human Ether-à-go-go-Related Gene) binding or was mechanism-based as a result of antagonizing sstr3. We investigated a structural series containing carboxylic acids to reduce the putative hERG off-target activity. A key tool compound, 3A, was identified from this SAR effort. As a potent sstr3 antagonist, 3A was shown to reduce glucose excursion in a mouse oGTT assay. Consistent with its minimal hERG activity from in vitro assays, 3A elicited little to no effect in an anesthetized, vagus-intact CV dog model at high plasma drug levels. These results afforded the critical conclusion that sstr3 antagonism is not responsible for the QTc effects and therefore cleared a path for the program to progress.Entities:
Keywords: QTc prolongation; Type-2 diabetes; antagonist; carboxylic acid; cardiovascular dog models; hERG channel; sstr3; β-tetrahydrocarboline
Year: 2014 PMID: 25050159 PMCID: PMC4094257 DOI: 10.1021/ml500028c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Med Chem Lett ISSN: 1948-5875 Impact factor: 4.345