1. Academic Validation
  2. First-Time Disclosure of CVN424, a Potent and Selective GPR6 Inverse Agonist for the Treatment of Parkinson's Disease: Discovery, Pharmacological Validation, and Identification of a Clinical Candidate

First-Time Disclosure of CVN424, a Potent and Selective GPR6 Inverse Agonist for the Treatment of Parkinson's Disease: Discovery, Pharmacological Validation, and Identification of a Clinical Candidate

  • J Med Chem. 2021 Jul 22;64(14):9875-9890. doi: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.0c02081.
Huikai Sun 1 Holger Monenschein 1 Hans H Schiffer 1 Holly A Reichard 1 Shota Kikuchi 1 Maria Hopkins 1 Todd K Macklin 1 Stephen Hitchcock 1 Mark Adams 1 Jason Green 1 Jason Brown 1 Sean T Murphy 1 Nidhi Kaushal 1 Deanna R Collia 1 Steve Moore 1 William J Ray 1 Nicole Marion English 1 Mark Beresford Lewis Carlton 2 Nicola L Brice 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Takeda California, 9625 Towne Centre Drive, San Diego, California 92121, United States.
  • 2 Cerevance Ltd, 418 Cambridge Science Park, Cambridge, U.K.
Abstract

Parkinson's disease (PD) is a chronic and progressive movement disorder with the urgent unmet need for efficient symptomatic therapies with fewer side effects. GPR6 is an orphan G-protein coupled receptor (GPCR) with highly restricted expression in Dopamine Receptor D2-type medium spiny neurons (MSNs) of the indirect pathway, a striatal brain circuit which shows aberrant hyperactivity in PD patients. Potent and selective GPR6 inverse agonists (IAG) were developed starting from a low-potency screening hit (EC50 = 43 μM). Herein, we describe the multiple parameter optimization that led to the discovery of multiple nanomolar potent and selective GPR6 IAG, including our clinical compound CVN424. GPR6 IAG reversed haloperidol-induced catalepsy in rats and restored mobility in the bilateral 6-OHDA-lesioned rat PD model demonstrating that inhibition of GPR6 activity in vivo normalizes activity in basal ganglia circuitry and motor behavior. CVN424 is currently in clinical development to treat motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease.

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