1. Academic Validation
  2. Cardiovascular response to small-molecule APJ activation

Cardiovascular response to small-molecule APJ activation

  • JCI Insight. 2020 Apr 23;5(8):e132898. doi: 10.1172/jci.insight.132898.
Brandon Ason 1 Yinhong Chen 1 Qi Guo 1 Kimberly M Hoagland 2 Ray W Chui 2 Mark Fielden 2 Weston Sutherland 2 Rhonda Chen 1 Ying Zhang 1 Shirley Mihardja 1 Xiaochuan Ma 3 Xun Li 3 Yaping Sun 3 Dongming Liu 1 Khanh Nguyen 1 Jinghong Wang 1 Ning Li 1 Sridharan Rajamani 1 Yusheng Qu 2 BaoXi Gao 2 Andrea Boden 2 Vishnu Chintalgattu 1 Jim R Turk 2 Joyce Chan 1 Liaoyuan A Hu 3 Paul Dransfield 4 Jonathan Houze 4 Jingman Wong 1 Ji Ma 1 Vatee Pattaropong 4 Murielle M Véniant 2 Hugo M Vargas 2 Gayathri Swaminath 1 Aarif Y Khakoo 1
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Amgen Research, South San Francisco, California, USA.
  • 2 Amgen Research, Thousand Oaks, California, USA.
  • 3 Amgen Research, Amgen Asia R&D Center, Shanghai, China.
  • 4 Amgen Research, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA.
Abstract

Heart failure (HF) remains a grievous illness with poor prognosis even with optimal care. The apelin receptor (APJ) counteracts the pressor effect of angiotensin II, attenuates ischemic injury, and has the potential to be a novel target to treat HF. Intravenous administration of apelin improves cardiac function acutely in patients with HF. However, its short half-life restricts its use to infusion therapy. To identify a longer acting APJ agonist, we conducted a medicinal chemistry campaign, leading to the discovery of potent small-molecule APJ agonists with comparable activity to apelin by mimicking the C-terminal portion of apelin-13. Acute infusion increased systolic function and reduced systemic vascular resistance in 2 rat models of impaired cardiac function. Similar results were obtained in an anesthetized but not a conscious canine HF model. Chronic oral dosing in a rat myocardial infarction model reduced myocardial collagen content and improved diastolic function to a similar extent as losartan, a Ras antagonist standard-of-care therapy, but lacked additivity with coadministration. Collectively, this work demonstrates the feasibility of developing clinical, viable, potent small-molecule agonists that mimic the endogenous APJ ligand with more favorable drug-like properties and highlights potential limitations for APJ agonism for this indication.

Keywords

Cardiology; Drug therapy; G-protein coupled receptors; Heart failure; Therapeutics.

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