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Dopamine D3/D2 Receptor Antagonist PF-4363467 Attenuates Opioid Drug-Seeking Behavior without Concomitant D2 Side Effects
Author(s) -
Travis T. Wager,
Thomas A. Chappie,
David B. Horton,
Ramalakshmi Y. Chandrasekaran,
Brian Samas,
Elizabeth R. Dunn-Sims,
Cathleen C. Hsu,
Nawshaba Nawreen,
Michelle VanaseFrawley,
Rebecca E. O’Connor,
Christopher J. Schmidt,
Keith Dlugolenski,
Nancy C. Stratman,
Mark J. Majchrzak,
Bethany L. Kormos,
David P. Nguyen,
Aarti SawantBasak,
Andy Mead
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
acs chemical neuroscience
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.158
H-Index - 69
ISSN - 1948-7193
DOI - 10.1021/acschemneuro.6b00297
Subject(s) - dopamine receptor d3 , pharmacology , dopamine receptor d2 , opioid , chemistry , antagonist , opioid receptor , antagonism , agonist , pharmacophore , receptor , medicine , stereochemistry , biochemistry
Dopamine receptor antagonism is a compelling molecular target for the treatment of a range of psychiatric disorders, including substance use disorders. From our corporate compound file, we identified a structurally unique D3 receptor (D3R) antagonist scaffold, 1. Through a hybrid approach, we merged key pharmacophore elements from 1 and D3 agonist 2 to yield the novel D3R/D2R antagonist PF-4363467 (3). Compound 3 was designed to possess CNS drug-like properties as defined by its CNS MPO desirability score (≥4/6). In addition to good physicochemical properties, 3 exhibited low nanomolar affinity for the D3R (D3 K i = 3.1 nM), good subtype selectivity over D2R (D2 K i = 692 nM), and high selectivity for D3R versus other biogenic amine receptors. In vivo, 3 dose-dependently attenuated opioid self-administration and opioid drug-seeking behavior in a rat operant reinstatement model using animals trained to self-administer fentanyl. Further, traditional extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS), adverse side effects arising from D2R antagonism, were not observed despite high D2 receptor occupancy (RO) in rodents, suggesting that compound 3 has a unique in vivo profile. Collectively, our data support further investigation of dual D3R and D2R antagonists for the treatment of drug addiction.

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