We have investigated the effect of the newly synthesized proton-pump inhibitor YJA20379-8, 3-butyryl-4-[R-1-methylbenzylamino]-8-ethoxy-1,7-naphthyridine, on gastric mucosal proton pump (H+/K+-ATPase) activity, gastric acid secretion and gastric lesions in experimental animals. In lyophilized pig gastric microsomes, YJA20379-8 was shown to inhibit H+/K+-ATPase activity; the inhibitory effect was not affected by pH, the IC50 (dose resulting in 50% inhibition) being 28.0 microM and 30.0 microM at pH 6.4 and pH 7.4, respectively. The effect was fully reversed by dilution and subsequent washing of the incubation mixtures of H+/K+-ATPase and YJA20379-8, suggesting the reversible nature of the enzyme inhibition. In pylorus-ligated rats, YJA20379-8 administered by different routes (intraduodenal, subcutaneous, intravenous or oral) resulted in dose-dependent suppression of basal gastric acid secretion. The duration of antisecretory action of 30 mg kg(-1) YJA20379-8 given intraduodenally was very brief (less than 7 h). Pretreatment with YJA20379-8 also dose-dependently prevented gastric lesions induced by absolute ethanol and water-immersion stress in rats. These results suggest that YJA20379-8 might exert its antiulcer activity partly by reversible suppression of acid secretion and partly by protecting the gastric mucosa against ulcerative stimuli.
We have investigated the properties of the newly synthesized proton-pump inhibitor, 3-butyryl-8-methoxy-4-[(2-thiophenyl)amino]quinoline (YJA20379-6), on gastric mucosal proton-pump (H+/K+-ATPase) activity, gastric acid secretion and gastroduodenal lesions in experimental rats. YJA20379-6 markedly inhibited H+/K+-ATPase activity in rabbit isolated gastric mucosal microsomes, confirming its classification as a proton-pump inhibitor. The inhibitory efficacy of YJA20379-6 on the proton pump was approximately 14-times higher than that of omeprazole at pH 7.4. YJA20379-6 given intraduodenally had a potent inhibitory effect on gastric secretion in pylorus-ligated rats (ED50 22.9 mg kg(-1)) but was less active than omeprazole. Pretreatment of rats with YJA20379-6 dose-dependently protected the gastric mucosa from damage induced by water-immersion stress, indomethacin and absolute ethanol, and the duodenal mucosa from damage induced by mepirizole. Repeated administration of YJA20379-6 also dose-dependently accelerated the spontaneous healing of acetic acid-induced gastric ulcers. These results suggest that YJA20379-6 has potent anti-secretory and anti-ulcer effects which are exerted by suppression of H+/K+-ATPase activity in gastric parietal cells. YJA20379-6 might be useful for the clinical treatment of peptic ulcer diseases.
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