| Literature DB >> 29638269 |
Abstract
Ajulemic acid (AJA, CT-3, IP-751, JBT-101, anabasum) is a first-in-class, synthetic, orally active, cannabinoid-derived drug that preferentially binds to the CB2 receptor and is nonpsychoactive. In preclinical studies, and in Phase 1 and 2 clinical trials, AJA showed a favorable safety, tolerability, and pharmacokinetic profile. It also demonstrated significant efficacy in preclinical models of inflammation and fibrosis. It suppresses tissue scarring and stimulates endogenous eicosanoids that resolve chronic inflammation and fibrosis without causing immunosuppression. AJA is currently being developed for use in 4 separate but related indications including systemic sclerosis (SSc), cystic fibrosis, dermatomyositis (DM), and systemic lupus erythematosus. Phase 2 clinical trials in the first 3 targets demonstrated that it is safe, is a potential treatment for these orphan diseases and appears to be a potent inflammation-resolving drug with a unique mechanism of action, distinct from the nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID), and will be useful for treating a wide range of chronic inflammatory diseases. It may be considered to be a disease-modifying drug unlike most NSAIDs that only provide symptomatic relief. AJA is currently being evaluated in 24-month open-label extension studies in SSc and in skin-predominant DM. A Phase 3 multicenter trial to demonstrate safety and efficacy in SSc has recently been initiated.Entities:
Keywords: CB2; antimetastatic; disease-modifying; inflammation-resolving; systemic sclerosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29638269 PMCID: PMC5891661 DOI: 10.1002/prp2.394
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmacol Res Perspect ISSN: 2052-1707
Figure 1The structure of ajulemic acid. (6aR,10aR)‐1‐hydroxy‐6,6‐dimethyl‐3‐(2‐methyloctan‐2‐yl)‐6a,7,10,10a‐tetrahydrobenzo[c]chromene‐9‐carboxylic acid. Molecular formula: C25H36O4. Exact mass: 400.261 g/mol. It is asynthetically modified analog of THC‐11‐oic acid, the principal metabolite of THC. THC, tetrahydrocannabinol
Figure 2Ajulemic acid increases survival time in an inverse dose‐response relationship in a mouse glioma model (Recht L and Salmonsen R, unpublished). High dose, 10 mg/kg; low dose, 0.1 mg/kg. AJA administration began 1 day after U87MG cell inoculation into the right flank of SCID‐NOD mice. N = 5/group. Calculated using Prism and the method of Kaplan and Meier. AJA, ajulemic acid
Therapeutic index of AJA compared with selected NSAIDsa
| Drug | Therapeutic index |
|---|---|
| Ajulemic acid | >300 |
| Ketorolac | 7.28 |
| Ketoprofen | 41.0 |
| Indomethacin | 13.3 |
| Diclofenac | 13.8 |
| Ibuprofen | 3.59 |
AJA, ajulemic acid; NSAID, nonsteroidal anti‐inflammatory drug.
The therapeutic indices were calculated from the ratio of the ED50 ulcerogenicity/ED‐50 adjuvant‐induced arthritis in the rat (95% confidence limits). The ED50 values for AJA are estimates since a dose of up to 30 mg/kg/day did not produce detectable ulceration (E. Dajani, unpublished data). The ED50 in the rat adjuvant arthritis test for AJA is estimated.3
Cannabinoid receptor binding data for several ajulemic acid preparationsa
| Ligand | Ki CB1 | Ki CB2 | CB1/CB2 | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ultrapure AJA (JBT‐101) | 628 | 51 | 12.3 | Tepper et al |
| Ajulemic acid | 5.7 | 56.1 | 0.10 | Dyson et al |
| Ajulemic acid | 32.3 | 170.5 | 0.19 | Rhee et al |
| WIN‐55,212 | 1.89‐123 | 0.28‐16.2 | ND | Pertwee et al |
| SR144528 | 50.3‐10 000 | 0.28‐5.6 | ND | Pertwee et al |
| SR141716 | 1.8‐12.3 | 514‐13 200 | ND | Pertwee et al |
AJA, ajulemic acid.
All Ki values are expressed in nmol/L units of concentration.
Included for comparison with AJA. SR144528 is a widely used CB2 antagonist. SR141716 is a CB1 antagonist also called Rimonabant.
Figure 3AJA induces release of free arachidonic acid in C6 glioma cells (Burstein SH, unpublished data). Cells were labeled for 20 hour with 14C‐arachidonic acid, media (RPMI + 0.1% BSA) were changed and cells were treated for indicated times with AJA in 10 μL of DMSO. The control was 10 μL of DMSO. Release was measured by liquid scintillation counting on a 0.1 mL aliquot of medium. Values shown are means ± SD. N = 4. AJA, ajulemic acid
Figure 4In vitro CB2‐initiated pathways for the synthesis of the proresolving eicosanoids PGJ2 and LXA4. All of the steps are tightly regulated except for the conversion of PGD2 to PGJ2, which proceeds in the absence of enzymic mediation. PGD2, prostaglandin D2; LXA4, lipoxin A4
Reported preclinical anti‐inflammatory and antifibrotic actions of ajulemic acid
| Observed action | Model | Reference |
|---|---|---|
| Reduces paw edema in mice | Arachidonate or PAF induction | Burstein et al |
| Reduces leukocyte adhesion | Mouse peritoneal cells | Burstein et al |
| Decreases joint damage | Adjuvant‐induced arthritis in rats | Zurier et al |
| Reduces leukocyte migration | Subcutaneous air pouch | Zurier et al |
| Reduces MS‐induced spasticity | EAE mouse model | Pryce et al |
| Antimetastatic Effects | Mouse glioma in vivo | Recht L et al, unpublished. |
| Reduction of IL‐1β levels | Blood and synovial monocytes | Zurier et al |
| Inhibits matrix metalloproteinases | Human synovial cells | Johnson et al |
| Inhibits cell proliferation in vitro | Several cancer cell lines | Recht et al |
| Apoptosis of human T cells | Caspase‐3 activity | Bidinger et al |
| Potent antifibrotic action | Bleomycin in mice | Gonzalez et al |
| Pathogen resolution | CFTR‐deficient mice | Bonfield et al |
| Reduced peritoneal cell infiltration | Zymosan‐induced peritonitis | Zurier et al |
| Antichemical blister activity | Human keratinocyte cell cultures | Atlantic Pharmaceuticals, unpublished |
AJA, ajulemic acid; CFTR, CF transmembrane conductance regulator.
The ultrapure preparation of AJA (JBT‐101) with reduced CB1 activity was used for these studies.32
Ongoing and planned Phase 2 clinical trials
| Target | Patient population | Sample size | Doses | Key findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Systemic sclerosis (SSc) | Adults with active diffuse cutaneous SSc | 41 | 5, 10 & 20 mg | 71% median of subjects achieved improvement in CRISS |
| Cystic fibrosis (CF) | CF patients, 18‐65 years | 70 | 5 mg/20 mg bid | Reduces acute pulmonary exacerbations and multiple inflammatory biomarkers |
| Dermatomyositis | Adults with DM | 22 | 20 mg bid | Improved CDASI by 9.3 vs 3.7 for placebo; |
| Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) | Adults with SLE | 100 | 5 mg | Efficacy in inflammatory pain |
CRISS, American College of Rheumatology Combined Response Index Systemic Sclerosis.
5 mg once a day on Days 1‐28, then 20 mg twice a day on Days 29‐84.
Cutaneous Dermatomyositis Disease Area and Severity Index (CDASI).
Planned to begin first quarter 2018.