726139-60-2Relevant articles and documents
BIARYL DERIVATIVE AS GPR120 AGONIST
-
Paragraph 0269, (2017/11/17)
The present invention relates to a biaryl derivative expressed by the chemical formula 1, a method for producing the biaryl derivative, a pharmaceutical composition comprising same, and use of same, the biaryl derivative expressed by the chemical formula 1, as a GPR120 agonist, promoting GLP-1 generation in the gastro-intestinal tract, reducing insulin resistance in the liver, muscles and the like from anti-inflammatory activity in the macrophage, pancreatic cells and the like, and allowing effective use in prevention or treatment of inflammation or metabolic diseases such as diabetes, complications from diabetes, obesity, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, fatty liver disease, and osteoporosis.
Discovery of Pyrrolidine-Containing GPR40 Agonists: Stereochemistry Effects a Change in Binding Mode
Jurica, Elizabeth A.,Wu, Ximao,Williams, Kristin N.,Hernandez, Andres S.,Nirschl, David S.,Rampulla, Richard A.,Mathur, Arvind,Zhou, Min,Cao, Gary,Xie, Chunshan,Jacob, Biji,Cai, Hong,Wang, Tao,Murphy, Brian J.,Liu, Heng,Xu, Carrie,Kunselman, Lori K.,Hicks, Michael B.,Sun, Qin,Schnur, Dora M.,Sitkoff, Doree F.,Dierks, Elizabeth A.,Apedo, Atsu,Moore, Douglas B.,Foster, Kimberly A.,Cvijic, Mary Ellen,Panemangalore, Reshma,Flynn, Neil A.,Maxwell, Brad D.,Hong, Yang,Tian, Yuan,Wilkes, Jason J.,Zinker, Bradley A.,Whaley, Jean M.,Barrish, Joel C.,Robl, Jeffrey A.,Ewing, William R.,Ellsworth, Bruce A.
supporting information, p. 1417 - 1431 (2017/03/08)
A novel series of pyrrolidine-containing GPR40 agonists is described as a potential treatment for type 2 diabetes. The initial pyrrolidine hit was modified by moving the position of the carboxylic acid, a key pharmacophore for GPR40. Addition of a 4-cis-CF3 to the pyrrolidine improves the human GPR40 binding Ki and agonist efficacy. After further optimization, the discovery of a minor enantiomeric impurity with agonist activity led to the finding that enantiomers (R,R)-68 and (S,S)-68 have differential effects on the radioligand used for the binding assay, with (R,R)-68 potentiating the radioligand and (S,S)-68 displacing the radioligand. Compound (R,R)-68 activates both Gq-coupled intracellular Ca2+ flux and Gs-coupled cAMP accumulation. This signaling bias results in a dual mechanism of action for compound (R,R)-68, demonstrating glucose-dependent insulin and GLP-1 secretion in vitro. In vivo, compound (R,R)-68 significantly lowers plasma glucose levels in mice during an oral glucose challenge, encouraging further development of the series.