Litcius/Paper detail

A CNS-Targeting Prodrug Strategy for Nuclear Receptor Modulators

Skylar J. Ferrara, Thomas S. Scanlan

2020Journal of Medicinal Chemistry50 citationsDOI

Abstract

The blood-brain barrier is a major impediment for targeted central nervous system (CNS) therapeutics, especially with carboxylic acid-containing drugs. Nuclear receptor modulators, which often feature carboxylic acid motifs for target engagement, have emerged as a class of potentially powerful therapeutics for neurodegenerative CNS diseases. Herein is described a prodrug strategy that directs the biodistribution of parent drug nuclear receptor modulators into the CNS while masking them as functional receptor ligands in the periphery. This prodrug strategy targets a specific amidase, fatty acid amide hydrolase (FAAH), an enzyme with enriched expression in the CNS. Our results demonstrate that this prodrug strategy can be generalized to a variety of carboxylic acid-containing drug structures that satisfy the structural requirements of blood-brain barrier diffusion and FAAH substrate recognition.

Topics & Concepts

ProdrugChemistryBlood–brain barrierPharmacologyCarboxylic acidCentral nervous systemFatty acid amide hydrolaseReceptorBiodistributionBiochemistryNeuroscienceAgonistCannabinoid receptorBiologyIn vitroCannabis and Cannabinoid ResearchPharmacological Receptor Mechanisms and EffectsDrug Transport and Resistance Mechanisms