Preclinical Development of Novel Dual OXR/KOR Antagonists for Treatment of Substance Use Disorder

NIH RePORTER · NIH · UF1 · $5,598,515 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT (Project Summary) Substance use disorder (SUD) characterized by the repeated use of an addictive substance leading to loss of intake control represents a serious public health and socio-economic burden with over 164 million people affected worldwide. SUD-related costs in the US surpass $750 billion USD annually, with over $272 billion of that attributed to the abuse of illicit drugs and prescription opioids. Of these, cocaine and related stimulants cause some of the most serious morbidity. More than 20% of fatal drug overdoses (2018) in the US involved cocaine, representing over 14,666 deaths. Mortality from cocaine use disorder (CUD) has tripled in the US from 2012 to 2018. Nonetheless, there are currently no approved drugs for the treatment of CUD, making it a serious global health threat and unmet medical need. Orexin neuropeptides (OX-A and OX-B) are endogenous ligands for two GPCRs, OX1R and OX2R. Their role in sleep/wake cycle and arousal has been studied, and the use of OXR antagonists for insomnia has been clinically validated with marketed drugs for sleep disorders (i.e.: Suvorexant). In addition to circadian cycle modulation, orexins also exert their effects through actions on the mesocorticolimbic dopamine (DA) system and thus are intricately involved with motivated behavior, arousal and reward-seeking, key components of addiction behavior. While both OX1R and OX2R signaling are implicated in the sleep/arousal effects, most or all the attenuation of stress-adaptive responses and addiction/reward-seeking behavior is attributed to OX1R signaling. First generation OXR antagonists (Suvorexant) are dual-acting (DORAs), inhibiting both OX1R and OX2R with similar potencies. Recently reported OX1R antagonist tool compounds tend to be modestly selective for OX1R (~50-fold) but possess poor physical properties. Designing ligands that can modulate two or more orthogonal signaling pathways simultaneously could provide a synergistic biological response in complicated disease states like stress-related mood disorders including depression, anxiety, and SUD. As such, the goal of this application is to develop a series of first-in-class, potent / highly selective OX1R antagonists (SORAs) as Dual-Targeted Ligands which also modulate other targets - that would provide an innovative treatment for CUD without the sleep-inducing liabilities seen with existing DORAs. We have already discovered, and patented potent multi-targeted preclinical small molecule leads with the following profiles: i) Highly Selective (>1000-fold) OX1R antagonists with dual mechanism of action and ii) OX1R-prefering antagonists which also modulate other targets. Thus, the 1st Specific Aim of this U01 application is to conduct in vitro pharm profiling studies of 6 selected OX1R- Dual Targeted leads including microsomal stability, solubility, Caco-2 permeability, MDR1-MDCK efflux ratio, and plasma & brain protein binding, initiate a med chem multi-parameter lead optimization c...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10400321
Project number
1UF1DA054817-01A1
Recipient
HAGER BIOSCIENCES, LLC
Principal Investigator
John A Butera
Activity code
UF1
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$5,598,515
Award type
1
Project period
2021-09-30 → 2026-06-30