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Drug design and delivery 1987-Sep

GABA uptake inhibitors. Synthesis and effects on audiogenic seizures of ester prodrugs of nipecotic acid, guvacine and cis-4-hydroxynipecotic acid.

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E Falch
B S Meldrum
P Krogsgaard-Larsen

Keywords

Abstract

The pivaloyloxymethyl esters 4 and 5 of the amino acid GABA uptake inhibitors guvacine and nipecotic acid, respectively, were synthesized as potential prodrugs. The half-lives of 4 and 5 for conversion into the parent amino acids were determined under approximate physiological conditions in the presence or absence of human serum. Under the former conditions the half-lives for 4 and 5 were 6.3 hr and 0.8 hr, and, in the absence of serum, 15.5 hr and 1.2 hr, respectively. The compounds 4 and 5 were administered intracerebroventricularly (i.c.v.) or intraperitoneally (i.p.) to DBA/2 mice and their effects on audiogenic seizures determined. In agreement with earlier findings for 5, all phases of the seizure response of the animals were suppressed by compound 4 at doses above 2mmol/kg i.p. At anticonvulsant doses of compound 4, as well as of 5, side effects such as sedation and impairments of motor activities were observed. The ethyl and pivaloyloxymethyl esters 9 and 11 of cis-4-acetoxynipecotic acid, designed as 'double' ester prodrugs of the GABA uptake inhibitor cis-4-OH-nipecotic acid, were synthesized and shown to have very weak anticonvulsant effects. Compounds 9 and 11 did, however, show a broad spectrum of cholinergic side effects. These apparent interactions of 9 and 11 with muscarinic cholinergic receptors have been explained on the basis of the similarity of the structures of 9 and 11 to that of the muscarinic agonist 1-methyl-4-acetoxypiperidine. Furthermore, the structural similarity of 9 and the muscarinic agonist nipecotic acid ethyl ester may, to some extent, underlie the cholinergic profile of 9.

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