Literature DB >> 9857091

Repaglinide and related hypoglycemic benzoic acid derivatives.

W Grell1, R Hurnaus, G Griss, R Sauter, E Rupprecht, M Mark, P Luger, H Nar, H Wittneben, P Müller.   

Abstract

The structure-activity relationships in two series of hypoglycemic benzoic acid derivatives (5, 6) were investigated. Series 5 resulted from meglitinide (3) when the 2-methoxy was replaced by an alkyleneimino residue. Maximum activity was observed with the cis-3, 5-dimethyl-piperidino (5h) and the octamethyleneimino (5l) residues. Series 6 resulted from the meglitinide analogon 4 bearing an inversed amido function when the 2-methoxy, the 5-fluoro, and the alpha-methyl residue were replaced by a 2-piperidino, a 5-hydrogen, and a larger alpha-alkyl residue, respectively. An alkoxy residue ortho to the carboxy group further increased activity and duration of action in the rat. The most active racemic compound, 6al (R4 = isobutyl; R = ethoxy), turned out to be 12 times more active than the sulfonylurea (SU) glibenclamide (1). Activity was found to reside predominantly in the (S)-enantiomers. Compared with the SUs 1 and 2 (glimepiride), the most active enantiomer, (S)-6al (AG-EE 623 ZW; repaglinide; ED50 = 10 micro/kg po), is 25 and 18 times more active. Repaglinide turned out to be a useful therapeutic for type 2 diabetic patients; approval was granted recently by the FDA and the EMEA. From investigations on the pharmacophoric groups in compounds of type 5 and 6, it was concluded that in addition to the two already known-the acidic group (COOH; SO2NH) and the amidic spacer (CONH; NHCO)-the ortho residue R1 (alkyleneimino; alkoxy; oxo) must be regarded as a third one. A general pharmacophore model suitable for hypoglycemic benzoic acid derivatives, SUs, and sulfonamides is proposed (Figure 6). Furthermore, from superpositions of low-energy conformations (LECs) of 1, 2, and (S)-6al, it was concluded that a common binding conformation (LEC II; Figure 10B) may exist and that differences in binding to the SU receptor and in the mechanism of insulin release between repaglinide and the two SUs may be due to specific hydrophobic differences.

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Year:  1998        PMID: 9857091     DOI: 10.1021/jm9810349

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Chem        ISSN: 0022-2623            Impact factor:   7.446


  12 in total

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4.  Selectivity of repaglinide and glibenclamide for the pancreatic over the cardiovascular K(ATP) channels.

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Review 5.  Hydrophobicity--shake flasks, protein folding and drug discovery.

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Review 6.  The role of sulphonylureas in the management of type 2 diabetes mellitus.

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7.  Optical control of insulin release using a photoswitchable sulfonylurea.

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10.  Evidence for a KATP Channel in Rough Endoplasmic Reticulum (rerKATP Channel) of Rat Hepatocytes.

Authors:  Sajjad Salari; Maedeh Ghasemi; Javad Fahanik-Babaei; Reza Saghiri; Remy Sauve; Afsaneh Eliassi
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