posted on 2021-07-14, 18:13authored byHolly A. Reichard, Hans H. Schiffer, Holger Monenschein, Josephine M. Atienza, Gerard Corbett, Alton W. Skaggs, Deanna R. Collia, William J. Ray, Jordi Serrats, Joshua Bliesath, Nidhi Kaushal, Betty P. Lam, Alejandro Amador-Arjona, Lisa Rahbaek, Donavon J. McConn, Victoria J. Mulligan, Nicola Brice, Philip L. R. Gaskin, Jackie Cilia, Stephen Hitchcock
The orphan G-protein-coupled receptor
GPR139 is highly expressed
in the habenula, a small brain nucleus that has been linked to depression,
schizophrenia (SCZ), and substance-use disorder. High-throughput screening
and a medicinal chemistry structure–activity relationship strategy
identified a novel series of potent and selective benzotriazinone-based
GPR139 agonists. Herein, we describe the chemistry optimization that
led to the discovery and validation of multiple potent and selective
in vivo GPR139 agonist tool compounds, including our clinical candidate
TAK-041, also known as NBI-1065846 (compound 56). The
pharmacological characterization of these GPR139 agonists in vivo
demonstrated GPR139-agonist-dependent modulation of habenula cell
activity and revealed consistent in vivo efficacy to rescue social
interaction deficits in the BALB/c mouse strain. The clinical GPR139
agonist TAK-041 is being explored as a novel drug to treat negative
symptoms in SCZ.