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Vol. 280, Issue 2, 710-720, 1997
Hoechst Marion Roussel, Inc., Neuroscience Therapeutic Domain, Bridgewater, New Jersey
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Abstract |
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1-[(3-Fluoro-4-pyridinyl)amino]-3-methyl-1(H)-indol-5-yl methyl carbamate (P10358) is a potent, reversible acetylcholinesterase inhibitor that produces central cholinergic stimulation after oral and parental administration in rats and mice. P10358 is a 2.5 times more potent acetylcholinesterase inhibitor than THA in vitro (IC50 = 0.10 ± 0.02 µM vs. IC50 = 0.25 ± 0.03 µM). It also inhibits butyrylcholinesterase activity as potently as THA (IC50 = 0.08 ± 0.05 µM vs. IC50 = 0.07 ± 0.01 µM). Ex vivo, P10358 (0.2 - 20 mg/kg, p.o.) produced dose-dependent inhibition of brain acetylcholinesterase activity. At 10 and 20 mg/kg, it produced profound and long-lasting hypothermia in mice. P10358 enhanced performance in rats in a step-down passive avoidance task (0.62 and 1.25 mg/kg) and in a social recognition paradigm (0.32, 0.64 and 1.25 mg/kg) in mice. It reversed scopolamine-induced deficits in the Morris Water maze in rats (1.25 and 2.5 mg/kg) and a higher dose elevated striatal homovanillic acid levels. These behavioral and biochemical effects are consistent with central cholinergic stimulation. Hemodynamic studies in the rat demonstrated a 16-fold separation between behaviorally active doses (1.25 mg/kg) and those that elevated arterial pressure (20 mg/kg). Lethality in rats occurred at an oral dose of 80 mg/kg, but not at lower doses. Chemically, P10358 is an N-aminoindole and may not have the hepatotoxic liability associated with aminoacridine structure of tacrine. P10358 had weak affinity (>10 µM) at a variety of aminergic and peptidergic receptors and uptake carriers. These properties suggest that P10358 may be a safe and promising symptomatic treatment for Alzheimer's disease.
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Introduction |
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Although many factors have been
attributed to the cause of AD, a consistent finding is a depressed
central cholinergic system, characterized by decreased presynaptic
cholinergic markers such as choline acetyltransferase (Bowen et
al., 1979
; Davies and Maloney, 1976
), and by degeneration of
cholinergic neurons in the nucleus basalis of Meynert (Bartus et
al., 1982
; Coyle et al., 1983
; Whitehouse et
al., 1981
, 1982
). This association, and the production of memory impairments from induced cholinergic hypofunction, have prompted considerable interest in cholinergic replacement therapy. Several cholinesterase inhibitors have been investigated clinically in AD
patients, including THA (Cognex) (Summers et al., 1986
;
Davis et al., 1993
), velnacrine (Siegfried, 1995
),
galanthamine (Kewitz et al., 1994
; Thomsen et
al., 1990
) and HEP (Brufani et al., 1987
). Of these,
THA has shown clinical efficacy in 20 to 30% of AD patients and is the
only agent to receive FDA approval for AD therapy (Knapp et
al., 1994
).
In general, clinical studies with THA show that memory can be
moderately improved with an AChEI. However, the maximum efficacy of
AChEI in AD therapy has not been satisfactorily determined because of
dose-limiting cholinergic side effects and liver toxicity, especially
with THA. In addition to the limitations associated with individual
AChEI, the heterogeneous pathophysiology of AD is another factor to
consider when assessing the efficacy of AChEI therapy. For example, a
subpopulation of AD patients, e.g., those lacking the ApoE4
allele, show preferential improvement during THA treatment. In
contrast, AD patients with at least one copy of the ApoE4 allele are
insensitive to THA treatment (Poirier et al., 1995
).
Therefore, the development of chemically novel AChEI that are tolerable
and relatively safe remains a therapeutic goal. Ongoing clinical
investigations with donepezil (Aricept; E-2020) affirm this approach
(Rogers and Friedhoff, 1996
).
The studies in this report describe the pharmacological, behavioral and
safety profiles of P10358 (fig. 1), a chemically novel AChEI for the treatment of AD. The discovery and characterization of
P10358 started with in vitro and ex vivo potency
determinations of AChE and BuChE inhibition. This was followed by
preliminary in vivo observations of cholinergic stimulation
(motor activity and hypothermia) and side effects. AChEI-induced body
temperature reduction was assessed because hypothermia can be used as a
physiological measure of central cholinergic stimulation and duration
of drug action (Gordon, 1994
). Behavioral correlates of central
cholinergic function were performed in rats (reversal of scopolamine
dementia in the water maze; enhancement of step-down passive avoidance) and mice (enhancement of social recognition). The ability of P10358 to
alter brain dopamine neurotransmission was evaluated since muscarinic
agonists and AChEI (e.g., THA, E2020) can increase extracellular levels of dopamine and its metabolite HVA (Yamanishi et al., 1992
; Xu et al., 1989
). Finally,
cardiovascular studies were performed to assess autonomic liability and
estimate a safety index, e.g., ratio between behaviorally
active doses and those that affect arterial pressure and heart rate.
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Materials and Methods |
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Animals. Male Wistar rats (150-250 g), Sprague-Dawley rats (275-325 g) and Swiss-Webster, CD-1 and CFW mice (18-30 g) were purchased from Charles River Laboratories (Wilmington, MA). ND4 mice were purchased from Harlan (Indianapolis, IN). All animals were housed in our colony before testing and were kept on a 12-hr light cycle from 0600 to 1800 hr with free access to food and water. Studies were carried out in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki and with the Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals as adopted and promulgated by the National Institutes of Health.
Chemicals.
P10358 and HEP were synthesized by Chemical
Research at Hoechst Marion Roussel, Inc. (Bridgewater, NJ) (Davis
et al., 1992
). These agents were dissolved in acidified
distilled water and all doses refer to the free base. All other
reagents were obtained from commercial sources.
In Vitro Studies
Cholinesterase activity determinations.
AChE and BuChE
activities were determined by a modification of the Ellman method
(Ellman et al., 1961
) as described previously (Bores
et al., 1996
). Wistar rat striatal homogenates (AChE) or human serum (BuChE) were assayed with 5 mM acetylthiocholine or butyrylthiocholine as the substrates, respectively.
Ex vivo AChE activity.
Groups of three male
Wistar rats or Swiss Webster mice were dosed s.c. or p.o.with several
doses of P10358 or HEP and killed at various times thereafter. All
animals were fasted overnight (
17 hr) before oral dosing. Residual
AChE activity was assayed as above using rat striatal or mouse
forebrain homogenate preparations (1:19 w/v) and 5 mM acetylthiocholine
(Bores et al., 1996
). Statistical differences were
determined by the Newman-Keuls test after a one-way analysis of
variance and ED50 values determined by log-probit analysis.
It must be noted that ex vivo measures of AChE inhibition may underestimate the actual degree of inhibition in vivo
due to dissociation that occurs during tissue dilution (Bores et
al., 1996
).
Radioligand binding profile. The ability of P10358 to nonselectively bind various neurotransmitter receptors, amine transporters and ion channels was evaluated with conventional radioligand binding methods. The following receptor (radiolabel) types were evaluated in-house: alpha-1 ([3H]prazosin) and alpha-2 adrenergic ([3H]yohimbine); D2 dopaminergic ([3H]N-methylspiroperidol); muscarinic ([3H]QNB); 5-HT uptake ([3H]5-HT); NE uptake ([3H]NE); DA uptake ([3H]DA). The following were assayed at Hoechst Central Screening (Frankfurt, Germany): A1 ([3H]DPCPX) and A2 adenosine ([3H]CGS-21680); angiotensin II ([3H]angiotensin II); bradykinin ([3H]bradykinin); endothelin-B ([3H]endothelin); GABA-A ([3H]muscimol); NMDA ([3H]MK-801); nicotinic ([3H]cystisine); µ-opioid ([3H]naloxone); quisqualate ([3H]AMPA); 5-HT2A ([3H]ketanserin); Ca++ channel ([3H]nitrendipine); K+ATP channel ([3H]glibenclamide) and adenosine uptake ([3H]NBTI).
In Vivo Studies
Primary cholinergic effects.
Overt cholinergic activity in
whole animals was assessed as described earlier (Irwin, 1968
; Fielding
et al., 1974
). Groups of four Wistar rats or four Swiss
Webster mice were administered P10358 and observed for a number of
overt behavioral effects (tremor; lethality) for up to 6 hr after
dosing. Lethality was also assessed 24 hr after administration.
Cholinergic activity was expressed as the number of animals exhibiting
each parameter vs. the total number of animals treated.
ED50 values for tremor were determined using nonlinear
regression analysis.
Hypothermia. Groups of four Swiss-Webster mice were randomly assigned to a vehicle control group or drug treatment groups, and two base-line pretreatment rectal temperatures were taken for each animal using a YSI series 500 temperature probe with readouts recorded on the YSI model 43 tel-thermometer (Yellow Springs Instrument Company, Yellow Springs, OH). Immediately on completion of base-line temperature readings, the animals were dosed with P10358 or vehicle control and rectal temperature measurements were made for each animal at 30-min intervals, starting 30 min postdose and ending after 5 hr. Group means were analyzed using a two-way repeated measures analysis of variance, followed by a LSD post hoc test.
In vivo effects on dopamine metabolism.
Fasted male Wistar rats were killed 1 hr after treatment with HEP
or P10358. Striata were removed and frozen at -80°C until assay. The
striata were homogenized in 100 mM perchloric acid with 4.3 mM EDTA and
centrifuged for 10 min at 10,000 rpm. The supernatants were transferred
to microfilterfuge tubes (0.2 µm, Rainin Instrument Co., Woburn, MA)
and recentrifuged as above. The high performance liquid chromatography
system used a C18-ODS Hypersil, 3 µm, 100 × 4.6 mm column with
electrochemical detection. The aqueous mobile phase consisted of 0.07 M
sodium acetate, 0.04 M citric acid, 130 µM EDTA and 230 µM sodium
octane sulfonate and contained methanol (buffer:methanol at 92.5:7.5,
v/v) (Wagner et al., 1982
). External standards were injected
at 10-sample intervals. The flow rate was 1.0 ml/min. Retention times
for DA, DOPAC and HVA were 5.2, 7.4 and 15.8 min, respectively.
Assessment of spatial memory. The ability of P10358 to reverse SCOP-induced spatial memory deficits was evaluated in the Morris water maze. In these studies, Sprague-Dawley rats were pretreated with SCOP (1 mg/kg, i.p.) and P10358 (1.25 and 2.5 mg/kg, p.o.) 30 min before testing each day. In a separate experiment, we determined that the oral administration of 1 or 3 mg/kg of P10358 caused significant and sustained inhibition of rat striatal AChE (1 mg/kg, p.o.: 1 hr, 25.8 ± 5.7% inhibition; two hr, 27.6 ± 4.3% inhibition; 3 mg/kg, p.o.: 1 hr, 25.6 ± 3.2% inhibition; 2 hr, 36.7 ± 1.4% inhibition. All values were significantly different from control (P < .01, grouped t test). Each rat's acquisition of spatial learning was assessed over 2 days. Briefly, a large black circular pool (140 cm diameter) was half filled with 22°C tap water. The tank was divided into four equal quadrants, and a 12 × 12 cm black plastic, platform with small holes to provide a gripping surface was submerged 2 cm below the water level in the center of one quadrant. The platform was not visible to the rats and remained in one location for the entire test. Preliminary tests with a different set of animals were conducted to verify the platform's hidden nature. Undrugged rats that had previously learned the platform's location were administered a probe trial in which the platform location had been changed to the opposite side of the water maze. During this trial animals swam directly to the original platform location and continued to search that quadrant of the maze. Only after this erroneous escape attempt did the rats explore the maze and randomly locate the platform in its new location. It was concluded that because the rats swam to the original platform location and not the new location, they were unable to see the platform itself. Had they been using the platform as a visual cue, they probably would have gone to it during the probe trial. A Panasonic CCTV camera was suspended over the center of the pool, its image monitored by a video tracking system [HVS VP 112 image analyzer; San Diego Instruments (San Diego, CA) software and interface; IBM PS/2 386 computer]. The water maze was surrounded by several distinct extra-maze visual cues (lights, posters, video equipment, etc.).
Water maze testing consisted of four trials per day, with a 15-min inter-trial interval. Therefore, rats received the final trial of each day 75 min after drug administration. It is possible the biological activity of drugs changed from the first to the last trial each day. Although this is possible, it is also evident from the in vitro, ex vivo and hypothermia data that P10358 was centrally active throughout the duration of testing. An ex vivo study of rat striatal AChE activity after oral administration of 1, 3 and 5 mg/kg show sustained (and significant) AChE inhibition out to at least 2 hr. Furthermore, the total testing time of 45 min was a relatively short period during the rising phase of likely in vivo activity for P10358. At the start of testing on day 1, each rat was placed in the water with its forepaws touching the tank wall, at one of four equally spaced points around the pool. Starting release points were counter-balanced alternately near or far from the platform across subjects and groups. The rat was allowed 90 sec to locate the hidden platform. If the animal did not locate the platform within this time, it was placed on the platform by the experimenter. After sitting on the platform for 20 sec, the rat was removed from the platform, dried and returned to its cage for the inter-trial interval. The second through fourth trials were performed identically to the first with the exception of the start location. At the end of testing on each day, each rat had been released from all four possible start points. The latency (in sec) and swim distance (in pixels, where 1 pixel = 0.3 cm) to reach the platform were recorded by the video tracking system. Latency and swim distance data for each subject were converted to percent of first trial performance. This ensured that all groups' performance was equalized from the beginning of testing, and any improvement or decrement in latency or swim distance was reflected as a change from that common starting point. Group percent means for each trial over the 2 days of testing were analyzed using a two-way repeated measures analysis of variance, followed by a LSD post hoc test.Enhancement of social recognition.
Social recognition was
evaluated in male CD-1 mice as described (Winslow and Camacho, 1995
).
Animals were singly housed for 1 to 2 wk prior to testing in
polycarbonate cages with wood chip bedding and nesting material. An
ovariectomized female (>40 days old) served as intruder stimulus
animal and was housed in groups of five. All testing was conducted in
the home cage of the male mouse in the vivarium. Tests were scheduled
for the latter part of the light period.
Enhancement of step-down passive avoidance.
The step-down
assay described by Camacho et al. (1996)
was used in our
study. On day one, groups of 10 Sprague-Dawley rats were acclimated to
the laboratory, experimenter and experimental chamber (31.5 × 24.5 × 27 cm), a plexiglas box equipped with white noise, soft
white light, shock grid bars spaced 2-cm apart and a wooden platform
(14 × 10.5 × 3.5 cm). On day 2, rats were again acclimated
to the experimental area and then administered P10358 (0.3-2.5 mg/kg,
p.o.). Thirty min after dosing, the rats were gently placed on the
wooden platform, and their latencies (sec) to step-down were recorded.
When all four paws touched the grid, a low level electric shock
(0.20-22 mA) was delivered for 3 seconds by means of a Coulbourn
Instruments (Lehigh Valley, PA) grid floor shocker. When the shock
ceased, the rats were immediately removed from the experimental chamber
and returned to their home cage. Fifteen min later this training
procedure was repeated. On day 3, the same rats were again acclimated
to the experimental area and then gently placed on the wooden platform.
Their step-down latencies were measured (maximum 300 sec) and no shock
was applied. Median latencies from the third day (24-hr retention
trial) for each drug group were then compared to the median latency of
the vehicle control group by the nonparametric Mann-Whitney
U test.
Hemodynamic activity.
Sprague-Dawley rats were anesthetized
with sodium pentobarbital (50 mg/kg, i.p.) then instrumented for
arterial pressure recording as described (Vargas et al.,
1993
). Briefly, the surgical site was shaved and scrubbed with
antiseptic. Polyvinyl catheters (ID/OD: 0.23/0.039 inch; Bolab, Lake
Havasu City, AZ) prefilled with heparinized saline (100 U/ml) were
placed in the left carotid artery and right jugular vein for blood
pressure recording and intravenous drug injection, respectively. A
23-gauge wire stylet was inserted to plug catheter and the catheters
were routed across the trachea and exteriorized at the nape of the
neck. The incisions were closed with 3-O surgical silk and Nexaband
Liquid adhesive (Veterinary Products Laboratories, Phoenix AZ). Animals
were examined daily and allowed to recover for 2 days. On the
experimental day, blood pressure was measured in the conscious freely
moving rat by attaching the arterial catheter to a length of PE50
tubing attached to a swivel mounted 30 cm above the cage. The swivel
attached to a Transpac Disposable transducer (Abbott Critical Care;
Chicago, IL). Pulsatile arterial pressure and HR were measured
simultaneously and recorded on a Beckman R611 Dynograph. MAP was
collected for 1 hr before and 4 hr after oral administration of P10358.
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Results |
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In Vitro Studies
Inhibition of AChE and BuChE activity in vitro. P10358 inhibited AChE and BuChE activity with potencies (IC50) of 0.10 ± 0.02 µM (n = 3) and 0.08 ± 0.05 µM (n = 3), respectively. Regarding AChE inhibition, P10358 was 11 times less potent than HEP and 2.5 times more potent than THA (table 1). P10358 was an equipotent inhibitor of AChE and BuChE activity, whereas THA and HEP were more selective BuChE inhibitors (table 1).
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Ex vivo inhibition of brain AChE by P10358.
The
dose-response relationships (fig. 2) of mouse forebrain
AChE inhibition after p.o. and s.c. administration of P10358 shows that
after 1 hr, the degrees of inhibition were not different (2-fold) when
the two routes of administration were compared (ED50 s.c.:
3.8 ± 1.2 mg/kg; p.o.: 6.7 ± 1.2 mg/kg). The inhibition of
forebrain AChE activity observed at 7 mg/kg, p.o. recovered to normal
levels within 4 hr (data not shown). Daily oral administration of 7 mg/kg for 5 days did not result in cumulative inhibition of mouse
forebrain AChE activity (fig. 3). As with the mouse, dose-response analysis of rat striatal AChE inhibition induced by p.o.
or s.c. P10358 administration also showed a 2-fold difference in the
ED50 values (s.c.: 3.6 ± 1.0 mg/kg; p.o.: 8.3 ± 1.2 mg/kg) (fig. 4A). Further characterization showed
that the inhibition of striatal AChE activity produced by 10 mg/kg
P10358 (p.o.) recovered to normal levels after 6 hr, but the dose of 20 mg/kg still showed significant enzyme inhibition after 24 hr (fig. 4B).
Although HEP was 11 times more potent in vitro on AChE
inhibition than was P10358 (table 1), HEP (ED50 = 10.2 ± 1.1 mg/kg) and P10358 were equipotent when measured 1 hr after oral
administration in the rat (fig. 4A).
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Effects of P10358 on brain dopaminergic function. The results in table 2 show the effect of P10358, HEP, MOCLO and TRANYLCYP on rat striatal DA, DOPAC and HVA. As with HEP, P10358 increased HVA levels, but had no significant effect on either DA or DOPAC. In contrast, the MAO inhibitors MOCLO and TRANYLCYP significantly decreased DOPAC and HVA levels. These findings indicate that P10358 is cholinomimetic through the specific inhibition of AChE, and does not affect MAO activity after oral administration.
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Receptor profile. Based on conventional radioligand binding assays, P10358 had weak interactions with a variety of neurotransmitter receptors, ion channels and uptake carriers (table 3). The low affinity of P10358 for these recognition sites implies that this agent is a relatively specific inhibitor of cholinesterase activity.
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In Vivo Studies
Primary cholinergic effects in rats and mice.
Oral
administration of P10358 produced tremor in both Swiss-Webster mice and
Sprague-Dawley rats (fig. 5, A and B). Nonlinear regression analysis of the dose-response data showed that the oral
ED50 for tremor was very similar in mice (7.1 ± 1.1 mg/kg) and rats (4.8 ± 1.0 mg/kg). Lethality emerged at high
doses in mice (40 mg/kg, p.o.) and rats (
80 mg/kg, p.o.).
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Hypothermia in mice.
P10358 produced significant hypothermic
responses in Swiss-Webster mice (fig. 6). All animals
had initial basal rectal temperatures of 37 to 37.5°C. Vehicle
treated controls had temperatures which decreased slightly (1-2°C)
over the course (6 hr) of the experiment. P10358 (5 to 20 mg/kg)
dose-dependently induced pronounced and long lasting hypothermia after
oral administration. The peak hypothermic effect and its duration
varied as a function of dose.
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Reversal of spatial memory deficits in Morris water maze.
A
repeated measures analysis of variance performed on mean percent of
first trial latency indicated a significant treatment effect over the
duration of water maze testing [F(3,38) = 9.5; P < .001].
Post hoc LSD tests revealed that the SCOP group took significantly longer to locate the submerged platform than the vehicle
and the two SCOP + P10358 interaction groups (1.25 and 2.5 mg/kg; LSD:
P < .001 for each comparison). In addition, both SCOP + P10358
groups did not significantly differ from the vehicle group (fig.
7).
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Enhancement of social recognition.
Acute administration of
P10358 (0.32-1.25 mg/kg, i.p.; [F(5,42) = 5.22, P < .01]
significantly affected olfactory investigation (fig. 8).
Moderate doses of P10358 had no measurable effect on initial levels of
olfactory investigation but did significantly enhance the rate of
decline resulting in overall decreases in time spent investigating. The
two highest doses of P10358 (1.25 and 2.5 mg/kg) also significantly
decreased walking (P = .04) and aggression (P = .17),
possibily reflecting broader effects on arousal or motor ability. These
disturbances were not detected at lower doses (0.312 and 0.625 mg/kg).
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Enhancement of step-down passive avoidance.
In groups of rats,
delivery of a low amperage shock during the first training trial
produced a modest but significant increase in the latency to step off a
platform on the second trial measured within subject (fig.
9, left). P10358 had no effect on latencies during the
first training trial and increased step-down latencies at 0.625 mg/kg
during the second training trial (fig. 9, middle). P10358 enhanced the
24-hr retention of the passive avoidance response (i.e.,
oral 0.625 and 1.25 mg/kg significantly enhanced the median step-down
latencies compared to the vehicle control group) (fig. 9, right).
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Hemodynamic assessment. Oral administration of 5 mg/kg P10358 did not alter MAP or HR in freely moving rats (n = 8) from base-line levels of 113 ± 5 mm Hg and 351 ± 13 bpm, respectively. At this dose, overt cholinergic signs (e.g., tremor and salivation), were not observed. At 20 mg/kg P10358 (p.o.) significantly elevated MAP above pretreatment values. The pressor effect was evident 15 min (27 ± 11%) after dosing and was sustained up to 4 hr (19 ± 8%). In contrast, HR was unaffected throughout the observation period. This high dose also produced peripheral and central cholinergic signs (e.g., tremor, salivation, piloerection and fasiculations), in each animal during the 4-hr period.
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Discussion |
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Despite the number of cholinergic therapies in preclinical and
clinical development for AD therapy, several have already dropped out
of development because of low efficacy or side effect liability (e.g., hepatotoxicity or blood dyscrasia). In addition, low
oral activity and bioavailability may limit the clinical development of
others. In clinical trials thus far, the presence or absence of the
ApoE4 allele has not been used as a criteria for patient selection or
screening, an important factor that may impact treatment outcome,
especially with an AChEI (Poirier et al., 1995
; Strittmatter and Roses, 1995
; Pomara et al., 1995
). Therefore, the
maximum efficacy that can be achieved with an AChEI has probably not
yet been realized in AD. Although the neurodegeneration found in AD is
likely to be a multifactorial process involving neurochemical and
genetic factors (Arai et al., 1992
; Raskind et
al., 1995
; Schellenberg, 1995
), cholinesterase inhibition remains
the only therapeutic approach to demonstrate clinical efficacy in
patients suffering from AD (Knapp et al., 1994
). Therefore,
a novel AChEI that is orally active, efficacious and tolerable remains
a goal to further validate the cholinergic hypothesis of AD and to
successfully treat AD patients. The pharmacological studies described
indicate that P10358 has a preclinical profile that may be advantageous in the symptomatic treatment of AD. These studies demonstrate that the
behavioral efficacy of P10358 in learning and memory paradigms is
attributed specifically to brain AChE inhibition, because this compound
has poor affinity for a wide variety of other neurotransmitter
receptors.
Biochemical and physiological measures of central AChE
inhibition.
Biochemical studies showed that P10358 displayed high
affinity for rat striatal AChE and was 2.5 times more potent that THA. P10358 was equipotent in its ability to antagonize AChE and BuChE activity in vitro, whereas THA and HEP are more potent
toward BuChE. The significance of this finding in not immediately
apparent but it does suggest that the two types of cholinesterase may
bind P10358 in a common domain shared by both enzymes, whereas BuChE binds THA and HEP preferentially. The slightly higher potency of THA
for BuChE identified in our study is consistent with a recent review of
the biochemical activity of THA which reported that this agent is a
more potent inhibitor of BuChE (Freeman and Dawson, 1991
). Currently,
it is uncertain whether P10358 behaves as a competitive or
noncompetitive inhibitor of cholinesterase activity, but future studies
are planned.
Behavioral efficacy of P10358.
Research and drug discovery in
AD is a formidable challenge because of the lack of definitive animal
models that mimic the etiology of the disease process. Due to the high
number of false positives that can be identified in learning and memory
paradigms (Sarter et al., 1992a
, 1992b
), it is highly
desirable to have biochemical and other mechanistic data to support
behavioral observations. Given the clear cholinergic mechanism of
P10358, this agent was tested in a number of behavioral assays of
memory. As such, P10358 was evaluated for its ability to enhance a
step-down passive avoidance response. Previous work indicates that
drug-treated rats showing an increase in their median latency to
step-down are considered to show an enhancement of learning (Cumin
et al., 1982
). After oral administration, relatively low
doses of P10358 (0.63 and 1.25 mg/kg) enhanced learning in the
step-down paradigm, a behavioral indication that this compound
effectively stimulated central cholinergic function. In the same
experimental paradigm, Camacho et al., (1996)
demonstrated
that other AChE inhibitors, such as galanthamine (1.25 and 2.5 mg/kg,
i.p.), HEP (2.5 mg/kg, i.p.), velnacrine (2.5 mg/kg, i.p.) and THA (2.5 and 5 mg/kg, p.o.) also enhanced the 24-hr retention latency which is
additional proof that brain acetylcholine is involved in forming the
memory trace for this task. When the lowest active oral doses were
compared, P10358 was 4- to eight-times more potent than THA and proved
to be the most potent anticholinesterase evaluated in this procedure.
The oral potency of P10358 indicates favorable bioavailability in comparison to the similar carbamate HEP, which was 10-times more potent
toward inhibiting AChE in vitro than P10358, yet was four times less potent toward enhancing step-down passive avoidance.
Safety profile of P10358.
Cardiovascular studies in the freely
moving rat indicated that P10358 raised systemic arterial blood
pressure at the high oral dose of 20 mg/kg, an effect that was not
evident at a 4-fold lower dose. The hypertensive effect of this AChE
inhibitor may be related to the activation of central cholinergic
stimulation since systemically or centrally administered AChE
inhibitors or muscarinic agonists can elevate arterial pressure in a
number of species, including man (Brezenoff and Guiliano, 1982
; Vargas and Ringdahl, 1990
). The hypertensive effect of P10358 was only observed at 20 mg/kg, a dose that also produced profound (
75%) and
long-lasting inhibition of striatal AChE activity. Therefore, there is
a clear separation (16-fold) between efficacious doses of P10358 that
enhance central cholinergic function (i.e., step-down passive avoidance in rat) and doses that produce central motor and
autonomic side effects (e.g., tremor and hypertension).
Lethality was not observed until even higher doses were given. For
example, acute mouse and rat toxicity, defined as the occurrence of
lethality over a 24-hr observation period, was not observed until oral
doses of 40 mg/kg in mice and 80 mg/kg in rats.
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Acknowledgement |
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The authors thank Dr. Hermann Gerhards (Hoechst Central Screening) for his invaluable assistance with the radioligand binding and uptake assays.
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Footnotes |
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Accepted for publication October 25, 1996.
Received for publication May 6, 1996.
Send reprint requests to: Dr. Craig P. Smith, Hoechst Marion Roussel, Inc., Neuroscience TD, PO Box 6800, Routes 202-206, Bridgwater, NJ 08807-0800.
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Abbreviations |
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AChE, acetylcholinesterase; AChEI, acetylcholinesterase inhibitor; AD, Alzheimer's disease; BuChE, butyrylcholinesterase; DA, dopamine; DOPAC, 3,4-dihydroxyphenylacetic acid; HEP, heptylphysostigmine; HVA, homovanillic acid; NE, norepinephrine; P10358, 1-[(3-Fluoro-4-pyridinyl)amino]-3-methyl-1(H)-indol-5-yl methyl carbamate; SCOP, scopolamine hydrobromide; 5-HT, serotonin; THA, tacrine; TRANYLCYP, tranylcypromine; MAP, mean arterial pressure; HR, heart rate; LSD, least significant difference.
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References |
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2-Adrenoceptor antagonists potentiate acetylcholinesterase inhibitor effects on passive avoidance learning in the rat.
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Focus on the aminoacridines.
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