Prostaglandin FP receptor antagonists: discovery, pharmacological characterization and therapeutic utility

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Abstract

In contrast to the availability of potent and selective antagonists of several prostaglandin receptor types (including DP 1 , DP 2 , EP and TP receptors), there has been a paucity of well-characterized, selective FP receptor antagonists. The earliest ones included dimethyl amide and dimethyl amine derivatives of PGF 2α , but these have failed to gain prominence. The fluorinated PGF 2α analogues, AL-8810 and AL-3138, were subsequently discovered as competitive and non-competitive FP receptor antagonists respectively. Non-prostanoid structures, such as the thiazolidinone AS604872, the D-amino acid-based oligopeptide PDC31 and its peptidomimic analogue PDC113.824 came next, but the latter two are allosteric inhibitors of FP receptor signalling. AL-8810 has a sub-micromolar in vitro potency and ≥2 log unit selectivity against most other PG receptors when tested in several cell- and tissue-based functional assays. Additionally, AL-8810 has demonstrated therapeutic efficacy as an FP receptor antagonist in animal models of stroke, traumatic brain injury, multiple sclerosis, allodynia and endometriosis. Consequently, it appears that AL-8810 has become the FP receptor antagonist of choice. Linked Articles: This article is part of a themed section on Eicosanoids 35 years from the 1982 Nobel: where are we now? To view the other articles in this section visit http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/bph.v176.8/issuetoc.

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Sharif, N. A., & Klimko, P. G. (2019, April 1). Prostaglandin FP receptor antagonists: discovery, pharmacological characterization and therapeutic utility. British Journal of Pharmacology. John Wiley and Sons Inc. https://doi.org/10.1111/bph.14335

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