| Literature DB >> 27437080 |
Haifeng Tang1, Yuping Zhu1, Nardos Teumelsan1, Shawn P Walsh1, Aurash Shahripour1, Birgit T Priest1, Andrew M Swensen1, John P Felix1, Richard M Brochu1, Timothy Bailey1, Brande Thomas-Fowlkes1, Lee-Yuh Pai1, Caryn Hampton1, Aaron Corona1, Melba Hernandez1, Joseph Metzger1, Michael Forrest1, Xiaoyan Zhou1, Karen Owens1, Vincent Tong1, Emma Parmee1, Sophie Roy1, Gregory J Kaczorowski1, Lihu Yang1, Magdalena Alonso-Galicia1, Maria L Garcia1, Alexander Pasternak1.
Abstract
ROMK, the renal outer medullary potassium channel, is involved in potassium recycling at the thick ascending loop of Henle and potassium secretion at the cortical collecting duct in the kidney nephron. Because of this dual site of action, selective inhibitors of ROMK are expected to represent a new class of diuretics/natriuretics with superior efficacy and reduced urinary loss of potassium compared to standard-of-care loop and thiazide diuretics. Following our earlier work, this communication will detail subsequent medicinal chemistry endeavors to further improve lead selectivity against the hERG channel and preclinical pharmacokinetic properties. Pharmacological assessment of highlighted inhibitors will be described, including pharmacodynamic studies in both an acute rat diuresis/natriuresis model and a subchronic blood pressure model in spontaneous hypertensive rats. These proof-of-biology studies established for the first time that the human and rodent genetics accurately predict the in vivo pharmacology of ROMK inhibitors and supported identification of the first small molecule ROMK inhibitor clinical candidate, MK-7145.Entities:
Keywords: MK-7145; ROMK; diuretics; heart failure; hypertension; natriuresis
Year: 2016 PMID: 27437080 PMCID: PMC4948008 DOI: 10.1021/acsmedchemlett.6b00122
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Med Chem Lett ISSN: 1948-5875 Impact factor: 4.345