1. Academic Validation
  2. Preclinical pharmacology and pharmacokinetics of CERC-301, a GluN2B-selective N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist

Preclinical pharmacology and pharmacokinetics of CERC-301, a GluN2B-selective N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonist

  • Pharmacol Res Perspect. 2015 Dec 23;3(6):e00198. doi: 10.1002/prp2.198.
Rachel Garner 1 Shobha Gopalakrishnan 1 John A McCauley 2 Rodney A Bednar 2 Stanley L Gaul 2 Scott D Mosser 2 Laszlo Kiss 2 Joseph J Lynch 2 Shil Patel 2 Christine Fandozzi 2 Armando Lagrutta 2 Richard Briscoe 2 Nigel J Liverton 2 Blake M Paterson 3 James J Vornov 3 Reza Mazhari 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Cerecor Inc. Baltimore Maryland.
  • 2 Merck Sharp & Dohme Corp. West Point Pennsylvania.
  • 3 Cerecor Inc.Baltimore Maryland; Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine Baltimore Maryland.
Abstract

The preclinical pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties of 4-methylbenzyl (3S, 4R)-3-fluoro-4-[(Pyrimidin-2-ylamino) methyl] piperidine-1-carboxylate (CERC-301), an orally bioavailable selective N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor subunit 2B (GluN2B) antagonist, were characterized to develop a translational approach based on receptor occupancy (RO) to guide CERC-301 dose selection in clinical trials of major depressive disorder. CERC-301 demonstrated high-binding affinity (K i, 8.1 nmol L(-1)) specific to GluN2B with an IC 50 of 3.6 nmol L(-1) and no off-target activity. CERC-301 efficacy was demonstrated in the forced swim test with an efficacy dose (ED 50) of 0.3-0.7 mg kg(-1) (RO, 30-50%); increase in locomotor activity was observed at ED 50 of 2 mg kg(-1), corresponding to an RO of 75%. The predicted 50% RO concentration (Occ50) in humans was 400 nmol L(-1), similar to that predicted for rat, dog, and monkey (300, 200, and 400 nmol L(-1), respectively). Safety pharmacology and neurotoxicity studies raised no specific safety concerns. A first-in-human study in healthy males demonstrated a dose-proportional pharmacokinetic profile, with T max of ~1 h and t 1/2 of 12-17 h. Based on the preclinical and pharmacodynamic data, doses of ≥8 mg in humans are hypothesized to have an acceptable safety profile and result in clinically relevant peak plasma exposure.

Keywords

Depression; GluN2B; NMDA antagonist; major depressive disorder.

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