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Biochemical Pharmacology 1990-Nov

Cardiovascular effect and stimulus-dependent inhibition of superoxide generation from human neutrophils by tibenelast, 5,6-diethoxybenzo(b)thiophene-2-carboxylic acid, sodium salt (LY186655).

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P P Ho
L Y Wang
R D Towner
S J Hayes
D Pollock
N Bowling
V Wyss
J A Panetta

Keywords

Abstract

Tibenelast (LY186655), 5,6,-diethoxybenzo(b)thiophene-2-carboxylic acid, sodium salt, is an orally active anti-anaphylactic compound in guinea pigs, and has been shown to prevent bronchospasm in moderately severe asthmatic patients. Pharmacological studies with tibenelast demonstrated that it is a selective phosphodiesterase (PDE) inhibitor in that it is moderately active against the lung and stomach enzyme while being a very weak inhibitor of the heart enzyme. The compound was without cardiovascular effects at anti-anaphylactic doses. In contrast to theophylline, tibenelast did not have a direct inotropic effect in the cat papillary muscle system. The concentration that inhibited 50% of the enzymatic activity (IC50) for tibenelast was 20- to 30-fold lower for neutrophil PDE than for PDE of other tissues. It was 100 times more potent than aminophylline in inhibiting superoxide generation from platelet-activating factor (PAF)-primed polymorphonuclear leukocytes (PMNL) challenged with chemotactic factor, N-formyl-methionyl-leucyl-phenylalanine. However, tibenelast was less effective in the tumor necrosis factor-primed system, and did not inhibit superoxide generation during phagocytosis or when other soluble stimuli, such as phorbo-12-myristate-13-acetate or the calcium ionophore A23187, were used. Furthermore, tibenelast did not inhibit enzymes involved in arachidonic acid metabolism. These results suggest that tibenelast probably inhibits superoxide release from PMNL via a selective inhibition on PDE.

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