Novel Liver-targeted conjugates of glycogen phosphorylase inhibitor PSN-357 for the treatment of diabetes: Design, synthesis, pharmacokinetic and pharmacological evaluations

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Abstract

PSN-357, an effective glycogen phosphorylase (GP) inhibitor for the treatment for type 2 diabetics, is hampered in its clinical use by the poor selectivity between the GP isoforms in liver and in skeletal muscle. In this study, by the introduction of cholic acid, 9 novel potent and liver-targeted conjugates of PSN-357 were obtained. Among these conjugates, conjugate 6 exhibited slight GP inhibitory activity (IC 50 = 31.17 μM), good cellular efficacy (IC 50 = 13.39 μM) and suitable stability under various conditions. The distribution and pharmacokinetic studies revealed that conjugate 6 could redistribute from plasma to liver resulting in a considerable higher exposure of PSN-357 metabolizing from 6 in liver (AUC liver /AUC plasma ratio was 18.74) vs that of PSN-357 (AUC liver /AUC plasma ratio was 10.06). In the in vivo animal study of hypoglycemia under the same dose of 50 mg/kg, conjugate 6 exhibited a small but significant hypoglycemic effects in longer-acting manners, that the hypoglycemic effects of 6 is somewhat weaker than PSN-357 from administration up to 6 h, and then became higher than PSN-357 for the rest time of the test. Those results indicate that the liver-targeted glycogen phosphorylase inhibitor may hold utility in the treatment of type 2 diabetes.

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Zhang, L., Song, C., Miao, G., Zhao, L., Yan, Z., Li, J., & Wang, Y. (2017). Novel Liver-targeted conjugates of glycogen phosphorylase inhibitor PSN-357 for the treatment of diabetes: Design, synthesis, pharmacokinetic and pharmacological evaluations. Scientific Reports, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep42251

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