Topiramate [TPM, 2,3:4,5-bis-O-(1-methylethylidene)-beta-D-fructopyranose sulfamate] (RWJ-17021-000, formerly McN-4853) is a structurally novel antiepileptic drug (AED). The preclinical anticonvulsant profile suggests that TPM acts primarily by blocking the spread of seizures. TPM was highly effective in the maximal electroshock (MES) seizure test in rats and mice. Activity was evident < or = 0.5 h after oral administration and lasted at least 16 h. The ED50 values 4 h after oral dosing were 13.5 and 40.9 mg/kg in rats and mice, respectively. TPM blocked pentylenetetrazol (PTZ)-induced clonic seizures at high doses in mice (ED50 = 1,030 mg/kg orally, p.o.). With motor incoordination and loss of righting reflex used as indicators of neurologic impairment, the neuroprotective index (TD50/MES ED50) for TPM was equivalent or superior to that of several approved AEDs. In mice pretreated with SKF-525A (a P450 enzyme inhibitor), the anticonvulsant potency was either increased or unaffected when TPM was tested 0.5, 1, or 2 h after i.p. administration, suggesting that TPM rather than a metabolite was the active agent. In mice pretreated with reserpine or tetrabenazine, the activity of TPM in the MES test was markedly reduced. TPM was inactive in a variety of receptor binding, neurotransmitter uptake, and ion channel tests. TPM weakly inhibited erythrocyte carbonic anhydrase (CA) activity. However, the anticonvulsant activity of TPM appears to differ mechanistically from that of acetazolamide.
We have explored the structure-activity relationship (SAR) surrounding the clinically efficacious antiepileptic drug topiramate (1), a unique sugar sulfamate anticonvulsant that was discovered in our laboratories. Systematic structural modification of the parent compound was directed to identifying potent anticonvulsants with a long duration of action and a favorable neurotoxicity index. In this context, we have probed the pharmacological importance of several molecular features: (1) the sulfamate group (6-8, 22-25, 27, 84), (2) the linker between the sulfamate group and the pyran ring (9, 10, 21a,b), (3) the substituents on the 2,3- (58-60, 85, 86) and 4, 5-fused (30-38, 43, 45-47, 52, 53) 1,3-dioxolane rings, (4) the constitution of the 4,5-fused 1,3-dioxolane ring (2, 54, 55, 63-68, 76, 77, 80, 83a-r, 84-87, 90a, 91a, 93a), (5) the ring oxygen atoms (95, 96, 100-102, 104, 105), and (6) the absolute stereochemistry (106 and 107). We established the C1 configuration as R for the predominant alcohol diastereomer from the highly selective addition of methylmagnesium bromide to aldehyde 15 (16:1 ratio) by single-crystal X-ray analysis of the major diastereomer of sulfamate 21a. Details for the stereoselective syntheses of the hydrindane carbocyclic analogues 95, 96, 100, and 104 are presented. We also report the synthesis of cyclic imidosulfites 90a and 93a, and imidosulfate 91a, which are rare examples in the class of such five-membered-ring sulfur species. Imidosulfite 93a required the preparation and use of the novel sulfur dichloride reagent, BocN=SCl2. Our SAR investigation led to the impressive 4,5-cyclic sulfate analogue 2 (RWJ-37947), which exhibits potent anticonvulsant activity in the maximal electroshock seizure (MES) test (ca. 8 times greater than 1 in mice at 4 h, ED50 = 6.3 mg/kg; ca. 15 times greater than 1 in rats at 8 h, ED50 = 1.0 mg/kg) with a long duration of action (>24 h in mice and rats, po) and very low neurotoxicity (TD50 value of >1000 mg/kg at 2 h, po in mice). Cyclic sulfate 2, like topiramate and phenytoin, did not interfere with seizures induced by pentylenetetrazole, bicucculine, picrotoxin, and strychnine; also, 2 was not active in diverse in vitro receptor binding and uptake assays. However, 2 turned out to be a potent inhibitor of carbonic anhydrase from different rat tissue sources (e. g., IC50 of 84 nM for the blood enzyme and 21 nM for the brain enzyme). An examination of several analogues of 2 (83a-r, 85-87, 90a, 91a, 93a) indicated that potent anticonvulsant activity is associated with relatively small alkyl substituents on nitrogen (Me/H, 83a; Me/Me, 83m; Et/H, 83b; allyl/H, 83e; c-Pr/H, 83j; c-Bu/H, 83k) and with limited changes in the cyclic sulfate group, such as 4,5-cyclic sulfite 87a/b. The potent anticonvulsants 83a and 83j had greatly diminished carbonic anhydrase inhibitory activity; thus, inhibition of this enzyme may not be a significant factor in the anticonvulsant activity. The alpha-L-sorbopyranoses 67, 68, and 80, which mainly possess a skew conformation (ref 29...
A series of 3,9 disubstituted [(alkylthio)methyl]- and (alkoxymethyl)-K-252a derivatives was synthesized with the aim of enhancing and separating the neurotrophic properties from the undesirable NGF (trk A kinase) and PKC inhibitory activities of K-252a. Data from this series reveal that substitution in the 3- and 9-positions of K-252a with these groups reduces trk A kinase inhibitory properties approximately 100- to > 500-fold while maintaining or in certain cases enhancing the neurotrophic activity. From this research, 3,9-bis[(ethylthio)methyl]-K-252a (8) was identified as a potent and selective neurotrophic agent in vitro as measured by enhancement of choline acetyltransferase activity in embryonic rat spinal cord and basal forebrain cultures. Compound 8 was found to have weak kinase inhibitory activity for trk A, protein kinase C1 protein kinase A, and myosin light chain kinase. On the basis of the in vitro profile, 8 was evaluated in in vivo models suggestive of neurological diseases. Compound 8 was active in preventing degeneration of cholinergic neurons of the nucleus basalis magnocellularis (NBM) and reduced developmentally programmed cell death (PCD) of female rat spinal nucleus of the bulbocavernosus motoneurons and embryonic chick lumbar motoneurons.
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