| Literature DB >> 26403853 |
Rainer E Martin1, Johannes D Aebi1, Benoit Hornsperger1, Hans-Jakob Krebs1, Bernd Kuhn1, Andreas Kuglstatter1, André M Alker1, Hans Peter Märki1, Stephan Müller2, Dominique Burger2, Giorgio Ottaviani3, William Riboulet4, Philippe Verry5, Xuefei Tan6, Kurt Amrein7, Alexander V Mayweg1.
Abstract
Inappropriately high levels of aldosterone are associated with many serious medical conditions, including renal and cardiac failure. A focused screen hit has been optimized into a potent and selective aldosterone synthase (CYP11B2) inhibitor with in vitro activity against rat, mouse, human, and cynomolgus monkey enzymes, showing a selectivity factor of 160 against cytochrome CYP11B1 in the last species. The novel tetrahydroisoquinoline compound (+)-(R)-6 selectively reduced aldosterone plasma levels in vivo in a dose-dependent manner in db/db mice and cynomolgus monkeys. The selectivity against CYP11B1 as predicted by cellular inhibition data and free plasma fraction translated well to Synacthen challenged cynomolgus monkeys up to a dose of 0.1 mg kg(-1). This compound, displaying good in vivo potency and selectivity in mice and monkeys, is ideally suited to perform mechanistic studies in relevant rodent models and to provide the information necessary for translation to non-human primates and ultimately to man.Entities:
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Year: 2015 PMID: 26403853 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.5b00851
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446