Abstract

IRL790 ([2-(3-fluoro-5-methanesulfonylphenoxy)ethyl](propyl)amine, mesdopetam) is a novel compound in development for the clinical management of motor and psychiatric disabilities in Parkinson disease. The discovery of IRL790 was made applying a systems pharmacology approach based on in vivo response profiling. The chemical design idea was to develop a new type of DA D3/D2 receptor type antagonist built on agonist rather than antagonist structural motifs. We hypothesized that such a dopamine antagonist with physicochemical properties similar to agonists would exert antidyskinetic and antipsychotic effects in states of dysregulated dopaminergic signaling while having little negative impact on physiologic dopamine transmission and, hence, minimal liability for side effects related to dopamine-dependent functions. At the level of in vivo pharmacology, IRL790 displays balancing effects on aberrant motor phenotypes, reducing l-DOPA-induced dyskinesias in the rodent 6-hydroxydopamine lesion model and reducing psychostimulant-induced locomotor hyperactivity elicited by pretreatment with either d-amphetamine or dizocilpine, without negatively impacting normal motor performance. Thus, IRL790 has the ability to normalize the behavioral phenotype in hyperdopaminergic as well as hypoglutamatergic states. Neurochemical and immediate early gene (IEG) response profiles suggest modulation of DA neurotransmission, with some features, such as increased DA metabolites and extracellular DA, shared by atypical antipsychotics and others, such as increased frontal cortex IEGs, unique to IRL790. IRL790 also increases extracellular levels of acetylcholine in the prefrontal cortex and ventral hippocampus. At the receptor level, IRL790 appears to act as a preferential DA D3 receptor antagonist. Computational docking studies support preferential affinity at D3 receptors with an agonist-like binding mode. SIGNIFICANCE STATEMENT: This paper reports preclinical pharmacology along with molecular modeling results on IRL790, a novel compound in clinical development for the treatment of motor and psychiatric complications in advanced Parkinson disease. IRL790 is active in models of perturbed dopaminergic and glutamatergic signaling, including rodent 6-hydroxydopamine l-DOPA-induced dyskinesias and psychostimulant-induced hyperactivity, in a dose range that does not impair normal behavior. This effect profile is attributed to interactions at dopamine D2/D3 receptors, with a 6- to 8-fold preference for the D3 subtype.

Highlights

  • This paper reports preclinical pharmacology along with molecular modeling results on IRL790, a novel compound in clinical development for the treatment of motor and psychiatric complications in advanced Parkinson disease

  • This paper describes the preclinical pharmacology of IRL790 as investigated in normal and perturbed states, including rodent L-DOPA–induced dyskinesia (LID)

  • The pharmacological properties of IRL790 were investigated in a series of in vivo studies in rats, including models of psychosis and abnormal involuntary movement (AIM), based on disrupted dopaminergic or glutamatergic neurotransmission

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Summary

Introduction

The key pathophysiology of PD involves loss of dopaminergic and noradrenergic neurons in the substantia nigra and locus coeruleus, respectively, which is associated with severe. Part of this work was presented as a poster presentation at the following workshop: Waters N, et al (2016) Pharmacology of IRL790, a psychomotor stabilizer for the treatment of L-dopa induced dyskinesias and psychosis in Parkinson’s disease. Motor symptoms and progressive autonomic and neurocognitive dysfunctions (Kalia and Lang, 2015; Vermeiren and De Deyn, 2017). Cortical, and autonomic pathologies contribute to nonmotor symptoms in PD. It has been suggested that corticostriatal dysconnectivity and plasticity are key drivers for both core symptoms of PD and adverse effects emerging with long-term dopaminergic treatment (Villalba and Smith, 2018)

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