1. Academic Validation
  2. Initial pharmacological characterization of a major hydroxy metabolite of PF-5190457: inverse agonist activity of PF-6870961 at the ghrelin receptor

Initial pharmacological characterization of a major hydroxy metabolite of PF-5190457: inverse agonist activity of PF-6870961 at the ghrelin receptor

  • J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2023 Jan 11;JPET-AR-2022-001393. doi: 10.1124/jpet.122.001393.
Sara L Deschaine 1 Morten A Hedegaard 2 Claire L Pince 1 Mehdi Farokhnia 1 Jacob E Moose 3 Ingrid A Stock 4 Sravani Adusumalli 5 Fatemeh Akhlaghi 6 James L Hougland 3 Agnieszka Sulima 7 Kenner C Rice 8 George F Koob 9 Leandro Vendruscolo 10 Birgitte Holst 11 Lorenzo Leggio 12
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Intramural Research Program, NIDA, NIH, United States.
  • 2 University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
  • 3 Syracuse University, United States.
  • 4 Pfizer, Inc., United States.
  • 5 University of Rhode Island, United States.
  • 6 Biomedical and Pharmaceutical Sciences, University of Rhode Island, United States.
  • 7 Drug Design and Synthesis Section, Molecular Targets and Medications Discovery Branch, NIDA and NIAAA, United States.
  • 8 NIDA/NIH, United States.
  • 9 National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, United States.
  • 10 NIH, United States.
  • 11 Laboratory of Molecular Pharmacology, University of Copenhagen, Denmark.
  • 12 Intramural Research Program, NIDA, NIH, United States [email protected].
Abstract

Preclinical and clinical studies have identified the ghrelin receptor (growth hormone secretagogue receptor 1a; GHSR1a) as a potential target for treating alcohol use disorder. A recent Phase 1a clinical trial of a GHSR1a Antagonist/inverse agonist, PF-5190457, in individuals with heavy alcohol drinking, identified a previously undetected major hydroxy metabolite of PF-5190457, namely PF-6870961. Here, we further characterized PF-6870961 by screening for off-target interactions in a high throughput screen and determined its in vitro pharmacodynamic profile at GHSR1a through binding and concentration-response assays. Moreover, we determined whether the metabolite demonstrated an in vivo effect by assessing effects on food intake in male and female rats. We found that PF-6870961 had no off-target interactions and demonstrated both binding affinity and inverse agonist activity at GHSR1a. In comparison to its parent compound, PF-5190457, the metabolite PF-6870961 had lower binding affinity and potency at inhibiting GHSR1a-induced inositol phosphate accumulation. However, PF-6870961 had increased inhibitory potency at GHSR1a-induced β-arrestin recruitment relative to its parent compound. Intraperitoneal injection of PF-6870961 suppressed food intake under conditions of both food restriction and with ad libitum access to food in male and female rats, demonstrating in vivo activity. The effects of PF-6870961 on food intake were abolished in male and female rats knock-out for GHSR, thus demonstrating that its effects on food intake are in fact mediated by the GHSR receptor. Our findings indicate that the newly discovered major hydroxy metabolite of PF-5190457 may contribute to the overall activity of PF-5190457 by demonstrating inhibitory activity at GHSR1a. Significance Statement Antagonists or inverse agonists of the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHSR1a) have demonstrated substantial potential as therapeutics for alcohol use disorder. We here expand understanding of the pharmacology of one such GHSR1a inverse agonist, PF-5190457, by studying the safety and pharmacodynamics of its major hydroxy metabolite, PF-6870961. Our data demonstrate biased inverse agonism of PF-6870961 at GHSR1a and provides new structure-activity relationship insight into GHSR1a inverse agonism.

Keywords

g protein-coupled receptors (GPCRS); ghrelin; inverse agonism; reactive metabolites/intermediates.

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