1. (Aryloxy)alkylamines as Selective Human Dopamine D4 Receptor Antagonists: Potential Antipsychotic Agents
- Author
-
David T. Connor, Robert Doubleday, Lawrence D. Wise, Robert G. MacKenzie, Thomas Capiris, Thomas G. Heffner, Steven Robert Miller, Thomas A. Pugsley, and Paul C. Unangst
- Subjects
Chemistry ,Stereochemistry ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Receptors, Dopamine D4 ,Antagonist ,CHO Cells ,Pharmacology ,Chemical synthesis ,Partial agonist ,Dopamine D2 Receptor Antagonists ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,Dopamine ,Dopamine receptor ,Cricetinae ,Dopamine receptor D2 ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Animals ,Dopamine Antagonists ,Humans ,Molecular Medicine ,Receptor ,Antipsychotic ,Antipsychotic Agents ,medicine.drug - Abstract
The discovery of a series of novel (aryloxy)alkylamines with selective affinity for the dopamine D4 receptor is described. Target compounds were tested for binding to cloned human dopamine D2, D3, and D4 receptor subtypes expressed in Chinese hamster ovary (CHO) K-1 cells. A number of compounds demonstrated subnanomolar Ki values for binding to the D4 receptor, with several 100-fold selectivities toward the D2 and D3 receptors. Several compounds with combined D3/D4 receptor binding selectivity were also identified. A limited structure-activity relationship study of this chemical series is discussed. In a mitogenesis functional assay, the effect of the test compounds on cellular uptake of [3H]thymidine in D4-transfected CHO 10,001 cells was measured and compared to the response of the full dopamine agonist quinpirole. The activity of the compounds varied from full antagonist to weak partial agonist activity (intrinsic activity of 0-19% in comparison to quinpirole).
- Published
- 1997
- Full Text
- View/download PDF