Abstract

Acute Ischemic Stroke (AIS) is the second-leading cause of global mortality with an estimated 6.7 million victims dying each year. Our research has focused on a non-neuronal cell type, the astrocyte, and has demonstrated that GPCR receptor-mediated maintenance of astrocyte function enhances critical homeostatic mechanisms in the brain including protection against AIS-associated edema, glutamate excitotoxicity and oxidative stress. AST-004 is a small-molecule agonist of the GPCR Adenosine A3 receptor (ADORA3), demonstrating excellent pharmacokinetics and blood-brain barrier permeability in preclinical species. The efficacy and dose-response of AST-004 was assessed in rat and non-human primate stroke models of transient occlusion of the middle cerebral artery (tMCAO). In rats, a 1.5-hour tMCAO was conducted with a 24-hour steady-state intravenous infusion of vehicle or AST-004 initiated at time of reperfusion (vehicle or three AST-004 dose levels, n=12/group); neurological deficit and stroke lesion volume (TTC staining/image analysis) were assessed 24 hours post-reperfusion. Compared to vehicle, AST-004 reduced brain lesion volume by 50% (p=0.04) and improved neurological function by 36% (p=0.03). In non-human primates (cynomolgus macaque), a 4-hour tMCAO was conducted with a 22-hour steady-state intravenous infusion initiated 2 hours prior to reperfusion (vehicle or three AST-004 dose levels, n=4/group). Stroke lesion, perfusion deficits and penumbral endpoints were assessed by FLAIR, T2, MRA, DWI and ASL at multiple timepoints out to 5 days post-occlusion. Neurological deficit was assessed at 5-days post-occlusion. AST-004 treatment resulted in statistically significant improvements in outcome relative to vehicle, up to a 44% decrease in lesion volume (p=0.02) and a 72% decrease in percentage of lesion growth (p=0.0006) over the 5-day study period. AST-004 treatment during occlusion also reduced the slope of lesion evolution prior to reperfusion by 72% (p=0.05) relative to vehicle. Together, these studies indicate the potential of a non-neuronal approach to reducing stroke lesion damage via the ADORA3 receptor. AST-004 is a first-in-class candidate that warrants further evaluation in human clinical stroke trials.

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