Two nonpeptide ligands that differ chemically by only a single methyl group but have agonistic (L-162,782) and antagonistic (L-162,389) properties in vivo were characterized on the cloned angiotensin AT1 receptor. Both compounds bound with high affinity (K(I) = 8 and 28 nM, respectively) to the AT1 receptor expressed transiently in COS-7 cells as determined in radioligand competition assays. L-162,782 acted as a powerful partial agonist, stimulating phosphatidylinositol turnover with a bell-shaped dose-response curve to 64% of the maximal level reached in response to angiotensin II. Surprisingly, L-162,389 also stimulated phosphatidylinositol turnover, albeit only to a small percentage of the angiotensin response. The prototype nonpeptide AT1 agonist L-162,313 gave a response of approximately 50%. The apparent EC50 values for all three compounds in stimulating phosphatidylinositol turnover were similar, approximately 30 nM, corresponding to their binding affinity. Each of the three compounds also acted as angiotensin antagonists, yet in this capacity the compounds differed markedly, with IC50 values ranging from 1.05 x 10(-7) M for L-162,389 to 6.5 x 10(-6) for L-162,782. A series of point mutations in the transmembrane segments (TMs) of the AT1 receptor had only minor effect on the binding affinity of the nonpeptide compounds, with the exception of A104V at the top of TM III, which selectively impaired the binding of L-162,782 and L-162,389. Substitutions in the middle of TM III, VI, or VII, which did not affect the binding affinity of the compounds, impaired or eliminated the agonistic efficacy of the nonpeptides but with only minor or no effect on the angiotensin potency or efficacy. Thus, in the N295D rat AT1 construct, L-162,782, L-162,313, and L-162,389 all antagonized the angiotensin-induced phosphatidylinositol turnover with surprisingly similar IC50 values (90-180 nM), and they all bound with unaltered, high affinity (22-36 nM). However, L-162,313 and L-162,782 could stimulate phosphatidylinositol turnover to only 20% of that of angiotensin. It is concluded that minor chemical modifications of either the compound or the receptor can dramatically alter the agonistic efficacy of biphenyl imidazole compounds on the AT1 receptor without affecting their affinity, as determined in binding assays, and that a number of substitutions in the middle of the TM segments affect the efficacy of nonpeptide agonists as opposed to angiotensin.
Virtual screening of the corporate compound collection yielded compound 1 as a subtype selective muscarinic M 1 receptor agonist hit. Initial optimization of the N-capping group of the central piperidine ring resulted in compounds 2 and 3 with significantly improved potency and selectivity. Subsequent optimization of substituents on the phenyl ring of the benzimidazolone moiety led to the discovery of novel muscarinic M 1 receptor agonists 4 and 5 with excellent potency, general and subtype selectivity, and pharmacokinetic (PK) properties including good central nervous system (CNS) penetration and oral bioavailability. Compound 5 showed robust in vivo activities in animal models of cognition enhancement. The combination of high potency, excellent selectivity, and good PK properties makes compounds 4 and 5 valuable tool compounds for investigating and validating potential therapeutic benefits resulting from selective M 1 activation.
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