Publication | Closed Access
Asenapine: a novel psychopharmacologic agent with a unique human receptor signature
490
Citations
15
References
2008
Year
Human ReceptorPsychotropic MedicationPsychopharmacologyPharmacotherapySocial SciencesMolecular PharmacologySerotonin ReceptorsPsychoactive DrugPsychiatryNovel Psychopharmacologic AgentNeuropharmacologyPsychotropic MedicationsPharmacologyFunctional SelectivityNeuroscienceBiological PsychiatryHistamine ReceptorsMedicineDrug Discovery
Asenapine is a novel psychopharmacologic agent under development for schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. The study aimed to determine and compare the human receptor binding affinities and functional characteristics of asenapine with several antipsychotic drugs. Compounds were tested under comparable assay conditions using cloned human receptors. Asenapine exhibited high affinity for multiple serotonin, adrenergic, dopaminergic, and histamine receptors, low affinity for muscarinic receptors, and distinct antagonist potency, giving it a unique receptor signature compared to other antipsychotics.
Asenapine is a novel psychopharmacologic agent under development for the treatment of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. We determined and compared the human receptor binding affinities and functional characteristics of asenapine and several antipsychotic drugs. Compounds were tested under comparable assay conditions using cloned human receptors. In comparison with the antipsychotics, asenapine showed high affinity and a different rank order of binding affinities (pKi) for serotonin receptors (5-HT1A [8.6], 5-HT1B [8.4], 5-HT2A [10.2], 5-HT2B [9.8], 5-HT2C [10.5], 5-HT5 [8.8], 5-HT6 [9.6] and 5-HT7 [9.9]), adrenoceptors (alpha1 [8.9], alpha2A [8.9], alpha2B [9.5] and alpha2C [8.9]), dopamine receptors (D1 [8.9], D2 [8.9], D3 [9.4] and D4 [9.0]) and histamine receptors (H1 [9.0] and H2 [8.2]). It had much lower affinity (pKi<or=5) for muscarinic receptors and was the only agent with affinity for H2 receptors. Relative to its D2 receptor affinity, asenapine had a higher affinity for 5-HT2C, 5-HT2A, 5-HT2B, 5-HT7, 5-HT6, alpha2B and D3 receptors, suggesting stronger engagement of these targets at therapeutic doses. Asenapine behaved as a potent antagonist (pKB) at 5-HT1A (7.4), 5-HT1B (8.1), 5-HT2A (9.0), 5-HT2B (9.3), 5-HT2C (9.0), 5-HT6 (8.0), 5-HT7 (8.5), D2 (9.1), D3 (9.1), alpha2A (7.3), alpha2B (8.3), alpha2C (6.8) and H1 (8.4) receptors. These functional effects differed from those of risperidone (pKB<5 for 5-HT6) and olanzapine (pKB<5 for 5-HT1A and alpha2). Our results indicate that asenapine has a unique human receptor signature, with binding affinity and antagonistic properties that differ appreciably from those of antipsychotic drugs.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1