1. Academic Validation
  2. Biochemical, functional, and pharmacological characterization of AT-56, an orally active and selective inhibitor of lipocalin-type prostaglandin D synthase

Biochemical, functional, and pharmacological characterization of AT-56, an orally active and selective inhibitor of lipocalin-type prostaglandin D synthase

  • J Biol Chem. 2009 Mar 20;284(12):7623-30. doi: 10.1074/jbc.M808593200.
Daisuke Irikura 1 Kosuke Aritake Nanae Nagata Toshihiko Maruyama Shigeru Shimamoto Yoshihiro Urade
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Molecular Behavioral Biology, Osaka Bioscience Institute, 6-2-4 Furuedai, Suita, Osaka 565-0874, Japan.
Abstract

We report here that 4-dibenzo[a,d]cyclohepten-5-ylidene-1-[4-(2H-tetrazol-5-yl)-butyl]-piperidine (AT-56) is an orally active and selective inhibitor of lipocalin-type prostaglandin (PG) D synthase (L-PGDS). AT-56 inhibited human and mouse L-PGDSs in a concentration (3-250 microm)-dependent manner but did not affect the activities of hematopoietic PGD synthase (H-PGDS), cyclooxygenase-1 and -2, and microsomal PGE synthase-1. AT-56 inhibited the L-PGDS activity in a competitive manner against the substrate PGH(2) (K(m) = 14 microm) with a K(i) value of 75 microm but did not inhibit the binding of 13-cis-retinoic acid, a nonsubstrate lipophilic ligand, to L-PGDS. NMR titration analysis revealed that AT-56 occupied the catalytic pocket, but not the retinoid-binding pocket, of L-PGDS. AT-56 inhibited the production of PGD(2) by L-PGDS-expressing human TE-671 cells after stimulation with Ca(2+) ionophore (5 microm A23187) with an IC(50) value of about 3 microm without affecting their production of PGE(2) and PGF(2alpha) but had no effect on the PGD(2) production by H-PGDS-expressing human megakaryocytes. Orally administered AT-56 (<30 mg/kg body weight) decreased the PGD(2) production to 40% in the brain of H-PGDS-deficient mice after a stab wound injury in a dose-dependent manner without affecting the production of PGE(2) and PGF(2alpha) and also suppressed the accumulation of eosinophils and monocytes in the bronco-alveolar lavage fluid from the antigen-induced lung inflammation model of human L-PGDS-transgenic mice.

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