AI Article Synopsis

  • N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) are crucial in various CNS disorders, with current treatments like memantine and ketamine having limitations and side effects.
  • Researchers aimed to create a new NMDAR open-channel blocker, K2060, which displays unique inhibitory properties and stronger effectiveness than existing drugs at inhibiting specific NMDAR subtypes.
  • K2060 showed promising results in a mouse model, reducing excitatory postsynaptic currents significantly and exhibiting a good safety profile, suggesting its potential as a treatment for NMDAR-related CNS disorders.

Article Abstract

N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDARs) play a significant role in developing several central nervous system (CNS) disorders. Currently, memantine, used for treating Alzheimer's disease, and ketamine, known for its anesthetic and antidepressant properties, are two clinically used NMDAR open-channel blockers. However, despite extensive research into NMDAR modulators, many have shown either harmful side effects or inadequate effectiveness. For instance, dizocilpine (MK-801) is recognized for its powerful psychomimetic effects due to its high-affinity and nearly irreversible inhibition of the GluN1/GluN2 NMDAR subtypes. Unlike ketamine, memantine and MK-801 also act through a unique, low-affinity "membrane-to-channel inhibition" (MCI). We aimed to develop an open-channel blocker based on MK-801 with distinct inhibitory characteristics from memantine and MK-801. Our novel compound, K2060, demonstrated effective voltage-dependent inhibition in the micromolar range at key NMDAR subtypes, GluN1/GluN2A and GluN1/GluN2B, even in the presence of Mg. K2060 showed reversible inhibitory dynamics and a partially trapping open-channel blocking mechanism with a significantly stronger MCI than memantine. Using hippocampal slices, 30 µM K2060 inhibited excitatory postsynaptic currents in CA1 hippocampal neurons by ∼51 %, outperforming 30 µM memantine (∼21 % inhibition). K2060 exhibited No Observed Adverse Effect Level (NOAEL) of 15 mg/kg upon intraperitoneal administration in mice. Administering K2060 at a 10 mg/kg dosage resulted in brain concentrations of approximately 2 µM, with peak concentrations (Tmax) achieved within 15 minutes. Finally, applying K2060 with trimedoxime and atropine in mice exposed to tabun improved treatment outcomes. These results underscore K2060's potential as a therapeutic agent for CNS disorders linked to NMDAR dysfunction.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopha.2024.117201DOI Listing

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