| Literature DB >> 25674162 |
Mohamed Lotfy1, Huba Kalasz2, Gyorgy Szalai3, Jaipaul Singh4, Ernest Adeghate5.
Abstract
Glucagon is an important pancreatic hormone, released into blood circulation by alpha cells of the islet of Langerhans. Glucagon induces gluconeogenesis and glycogenolysis in hepatocytes, leading to an increase in hepatic glucose production and subsequently hyperglycemia in susceptible individuals. Hyperglucagonemia is a constant feature in patients with T2DM. A number of bioactive agents that can block glucagon receptor have been identified. These glucagon receptor antagonists can reduce the hyperglycemia associated with exogenous glucagon administration in normal as well as diabetic subjects. Glucagon receptor antagonists include isoserine and beta-alanine derivatives, bicyclic 19-residue peptide BI-32169, Des-His1-[Glu9] glucagon amide and related compounds, 5-hydroxyalkyl-4-phenylpyridines, N-[3-cano-6- (1,1 dimethylpropyl)-4,5,6,7-tetrahydro-1-benzothien-2-yl]-2-ethylbutamide, Skyrin and NNC 250926. The absorption, dosage, catabolism, excretion and medicinal chemistry of these agents are the subject of this review. It emphasizes the role of glucagon in glucose homeostasis and how it could be applied as a novel tool for the management of diabetes mellitus by blocking its receptors with either monoclonal antibodies, peptide and non-peptide antagonists or gene knockout techniques.Entities:
Keywords: Diabetes mellitus; glucagon; glucagon receptor antagonists; pancreas.
Year: 2014 PMID: 25674162 PMCID: PMC4321206 DOI: 10.2174/1874104501408010028
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Open Med Chem J ISSN: 1874-1045
The use of immunoneutralization of glucagon receptors by monoclonal antibody.
| Dosage | 1 - 30 mg/kg (monoclonal antibody) | References |
|---|---|---|
| Mode of delivery | Subcutaneous (s.c.) | [18-21] |
| Efficacy | Single s.c. injection of 3 mg/kg body weight maintained normoglycemia for 8 days. |
Peptide antagonists of glucagon receptors.
| Dosage | Mode of Delivery | Efficacy | References | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Bicyclic 19-residue peptide BI-32169 | 320-440 nM | Subcutaneous (s.c.) or intravenous (i.v.) | Investigations still in the experimental phase. | [42, 43] |
| Des-His(1)-[Glu(9)]-glucagon amide | 10 µg | Intravenously (i.v.) | Single dose blocks up to 40-80% of endo- as well as exogenous glucagon, including free as well as hepatocyte-bound. | [39,40, 43-45] |
The advantages and disadvantages of glucagon neutralization and glucagon receptor antagonists.
| Advantages | Disadvantages | References | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neutralizing antibodies against glucagon | Reduced hyperglycemia; lowers triglyceride concentration | Weight gain | [22] |
| Glucagon receptor antagonism | Decreased blood glucose concentrations | Abnormal lipid production | [16, 21] |
The effect some glucagon receptor antagonists.
| Drug | Compound | Efficacy | Dosage | Adverse effect | Clinical phase | Ref |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Spiro-urea | Compound 15 | (a)Reduced glucose excursion after glucagon challenge ; (b) blocks glucagon effect | 10 and 30 mg/kg (i.m.) | thirst, dry mouth, nausea, polyuria | Pre-clinical | [53, 67] |
| Benzimidazole | Compound 36 | Reduced glucose levels in diabetes; suppressed glucagon-induced glucose increase in animals | 10 and 3 mg/kg in rhesus | Reduced human liver microsome stability | Pre-clinical | [56, 68] |
| Skyrin | Fungal bisanthro-quinone | Antagonized functional glucagon (uncouples glucagon receptor from adenylate cyclase in hepatocyte plasmalemma | 30 micromol/l inhibited glucagon-stimulated cAMP production and glucose output | Suppressed Na+, K+-activated ATPase; Inhibits microsomal activity in rat brain | Not in clinical trial | [51, 69] |