Pharmacology in translation: the preclinical and early clinical profile of the novel α2/3 functionally selective GABAA receptor positive allosteric modulator PF‐06372865

Background and Purpose Benzodiazepines, non‐selective positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) of GABAA receptors, have significant side effects that limit their clinical utility. As many of these side effects are mediated by the α1 subunit, there has been a concerted effort to develop α2/3 subtype‐sel...

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Published inBritish journal of pharmacology Vol. 175; no. 4; pp. 708 - 725
Main Authors Nickolls, Sarah A, Gurrell, Rachel, Amerongen, Guido, Kammonen, Juha, Cao, Lishuang, Brown, Adam R, Stead, Clara, Mead, Andy, Watson, Christine, Hsu, Cathleen, Owen, Robert M, Pike, Andy, Fish, Rebecca L, Chen, Laigao, Qiu, Ruolun, Morris, Evan D, Feng, Gang, Whitlock, Mark, Gorman, Donal, Gerven, Joop, Reynolds, David S, Dua, Pinky, Butt, Richard P
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published London Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.02.2018
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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Summary:Background and Purpose Benzodiazepines, non‐selective positive allosteric modulators (PAMs) of GABAA receptors, have significant side effects that limit their clinical utility. As many of these side effects are mediated by the α1 subunit, there has been a concerted effort to develop α2/3 subtype‐selective PAMs. Experimental Approach In vitro screening assays were used to identify molecules with functional selectivity for receptors containing α2/3 subunits over those containing α1 subunits. In vivo receptor occupancy (RO) was conducted, prior to confirmation of in vivo α2/3 and α1 pharmacology through quantitative EEG (qEEG) beta frequency and zolpidem drug discrimination in rats respectively. PF‐06372865 was then progressed to Phase 1 clinical trials. Key Results PF‐06372865 exhibited functional selectivity for those receptors containing α2/3/5 subunits, with significant positive allosteric modulation (90–140%) but negligible activity (≤20%) at GABAA receptors containing α1 subunits. PF‐06372865 exhibited concentration‐dependent occupancy of GABAA receptors in preclinical species. There was an occupancy‐dependent increase in qEEG beta frequency and no generalization to a GABAA α1 cue in the drug‐discrimination assay, clearly demonstrating the lack of modulation at the GABAA receptors containing an α1 subtype. In a Phase 1 single ascending dose study in healthy volunteers, evaluation of the pharmacodynamics of PF‐06372865 demonstrated a robust increase in saccadic peak velocity (a marker of α2/3 pharmacology), increases in beta frequency qEEG and a slight saturating increase in body sway. Conclusions and Implications PF‐06372865 has a unique clinical pharmacology profile and a highly predictive translational data package from preclinical species to the clinical setting.
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Joint author.
Trial numbers: NCT01951144 and NCT02138500.
Joint last author.
ISSN:0007-1188
1476-5381
1476-5381
DOI:10.1111/bph.14119