The discovery of new highly potent and selective dopamine D3 receptor antagonists has recently permitted characterization of the role of the dopamine D3 receptor in a wide range of preclinical animal models. A novel series of 1,2,4-triazol-3-yl-thiopropyl-tetrahydrobenzazepines demonstrating a high level of D3 affinity and selectivity with an excellent pharmacokinetic profile is reported here. In particular, the pyrazolyl derivative 35 showed good oral bioavailability and brain penetration associated with high potency and selectivity in vitro. In vivo characterization of 35 confirmed that this compound blocks the expression of nicotine- and cocaine-conditioned place preference in the rat, prevents nicotine-triggered reinstatement of nicotine-seeking behavior in the rat, reduces oral operant alcohol self-administration in the mouse, increases extracellular levels of acetylcholine in the rat medial prefrontal cortex, and potentiates the amplitude of the relative cerebral blood volume response to d-amphetamine in a regionally specific manner in the rat brain.
ATP citrate lyase is an enzyme involved in mammalian lipogenesis and cholesterogenesis. Inhibitors of the enzyme represent a potentially novel class of hypolipidemic agents. Citric acid analogues 5-16 bearing electrophilic and latent electrophilic substituents were synthesized and evaluated as irreversible inhibitors of the enzyme. The design of these agents was based on the classical enzymatic mechanism where an active-site nucleophile (thiol) was believed to be critically involved in catalysis. Reversible inhibition (Ki's ranging from ca. 20 to 500 microM) was observed for compounds 5, 10, and 12-16. Compounds 6-9 and 11 had no appreciable affinity for enzyme (Ki> 1 mM). Time-dependent inactivation of the enzyme by 5-16 was not detected following long incubation times (> 1 h, 37 degrees C) at 2 mM inhibitor concentrations.
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