Abstract
Potential clinical utility of galanin or peptidic analogs has been hindered by poor metabolic stability, lack of brain penetration, and hyperglycemia due to galanin receptor subtype 1 (GalR1) activation. NAX 810-2, a galanin receptor subtype 2 (GalR2)-preferring galanin analog, possesses 15-fold greater affinity for GalR2 over GalR1 and protects against seizures in the mouse 6 Hz, corneal kindling, and Frings audiogenic seizure models. The purpose of these studies was to further evaluate the preclinical efficacy and pharmacokinetics of NAX 810-2 in mice. NAX 810-2 was administered by intravenous (i.v.; tail vein, bolus) injection to fully kindled (corneal kindling assay) or naive CF-1 mice (6 Hz assay and pharmacokinetic studies). Plasma NAX 810-2 levels were determined from trunk blood samples. NAX 810-2 was also added to human plasma at various concentrations for determination of plasma protein binding. In the mouse corneal kindling model, NAX 810-2 dose-dependently blocked seizures following intravenous administration (median effective dose [ED50 ], 0.5 mg/kg). In the mouse 6 Hz (32 mA) seizure model, it was demonstrated that NAX 810-2 dose-dependently blocked seizures following bolus administration (0.375-1.5 mg/kg, i.v.; ED50 , 0.7 mg/kg), with a time-to-peak effect of 0.5 h posttreatment. Motor impairment was observed at 1.5 mg/kg, i.v., whereas one-half of this dose, 0.75 mg/kg, i.v., was maximally effective in the 6 Hz test. Plasma levels of NAX 810-2 show linear pharmacokinetics following intravenous administration and a half-life of 1.2 h. Functional agonist activity studies demonstrate that NAX 810-2 effectively activates GalR2 at therapeutic concentrations. These studies further suggest the potential utility of NAX 810-2 as a novel therapy for epilepsy.
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