Q1 · MEDICINE
Article
Author: Yalamanchili, Padmaja ; Bagdanoff, Jeffrey T. ; Owusu, Iris B. ; Gopinathan, Suma ; Zhang, Haiming ; Brown, Philip ; Boteju, Lakmal ; Nouraldeen, Amr ; Heydorn, William E. ; Wilson, Alan ; Aleem, Saadat ; Yan, Jack ; Layek, Suman ; Dong, Li ; Oravecz, Tamas ; Kramer, Jeff ; Moran, Liam ; Bednarz, Mark ; Brooks, Barbara ; Jessop, Theodore C. ; Main, Alan ; Augeri, David J. ; Kimball, S. David ; Tarver, James ; Carson, Kenneth G. ; Donoviel, Michael S. ; Carlsen, Marianne ; Hazelwood, Jill ; Frazier, Kenny S. ; Sonnenburg, William K. ; Lai, Zhong
Sphingosine 1-phosphate lyase (S1PL) has been characterized as a novel target for the treatment of autoimmune disorders using genetic and pharmacological methods. Medicinal chemistry efforts targeting S1PL by direct in vivo evaluation of synthetic analogues of 2-acetyl-4(5)-(1(R),2(S),3(R),4-tetrahydroxybutyl)-imidazole (THI, 1) led to the discovery of 2 (LX2931) and 4 (LX2932). The immunological phenotypes observed in S1PL deficient mice were recapitulated by oral administration of 2 or 4. Oral dosing of 2 or 4 yielded a dose-dependent decrease in circulating lymphocyte numbers in multiple species and showed a therapeutic effect in rodent models of rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Phase I clinical trials indicated that 2, the first clinically studied inhibitor of S1PL, produced a dose-dependent and reversible reduction of circulating lymphocytes and was well tolerated at dose levels of up to 180 mg daily. Phase II evaluation of 2 in patients with active rheumatoid arthritis is currently underway.