| Literature DB >> 32902984 |
Frédéric Labéguère1, Sonia Dupont1, Luke Alvey1, Florilène Soulas1, Gregory Newsome1, Amynata Tirera1, Vanessa Quenehen1, Thi Thu Trang Mai1, Pierre Deprez1, Roland Blanqué1, Line Oste2, Sandrine Le Tallec1, Steve De Vos2, Annick Hagers2, Ann Vandevelde2, Luc Nelles2, Nele Vandervoort2, Katja Conrath2, Thierry Christophe2, Ellen van der Aar2, Emanuelle Wakselman1, Didier Merciris1, Céline Cottereaux1, Cécile da Costa1, Laurent Saniere1, Philippe Clement-Lacroix1, Laura Jenkins3, Graeme Milligan3, Stephen Fletcher2, Reginald Brys2, Romain Gosmini1.
Abstract
GPR84 is a medium chain free fatty acid-binding G-protein-coupled receptor associated with inflammatory and fibrotic diseases. As the only reported antagonist of GPR84 (PBI-4050) that displays relatively low potency and selectivity, a clear need exists for an improved modulator. Structural optimization of GPR84 antagonist hit 1, identified through high-throughput screening, led to the identification of potent and selective GPR84 inhibitor GLPG1205 (36). Compared with the initial hit, 36 showed improved potency in a guanosine 5'-O-[γ-thio]triphosphate assay, exhibited metabolic stability, and lacked activity against phosphodiesterase-4. This novel pharmacological tool allowed investigation of the therapeutic potential of GPR84 inhibition. At once-daily doses of 3 and 10 mg/kg, GLPG1205 reduced disease activity index score and neutrophil infiltration in a mouse dextran sodium sulfate-induced chronic inflammatory bowel disease model, with efficacy similar to positive-control compound sulfasalazine. The drug discovery steps leading to GLPG1205 identification, currently under phase II clinical investigation, are described herein.Entities:
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Year: 2020 PMID: 32902984 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.0c00272
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446