JMV 2959
目录号 : GC31274JMV2959是一种生长激素促分泌素受体1a型(GHS-R1a)拮抗剂,其IC50值为32nM。
Cas No.:925238-89-7
Sample solution is provided at 25 µL, 10mM.
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Animal experiment: | Two-hundred-gram male Sprague-Dawley rats are used in the study. The animals (n=15) are randomly assigned to an initial treatment dose or vehicle and subsequently receive all the different doses tested in a counter balanced design. Each test is separated by a 3- to 4-day-long washout period. The rats are given the injection of JMV 2959 (or vehicle) 17 min prior to being placed in the startle cages (i.e., 25 min prior to the first pulse). The doses of JMV 2959 used for the dose response are 1, 3, and 6 mg/kg[2]. |
References: [1]. Moulin A, et al. The 1,2,4-triazole as a scaffold for the design of ghrelin receptor ligands: development of JMV 2959, a potent antagonist. Amino Acids. 2013 Feb;44(2):301-14. |
JMV 2959 is a growth hormone secretagogue receptor type 1a (GHS-R1a) antagonist with an IC50 of 32 nM.
JMV 2959 is a growth hormone secretagogue receptor type 1a (GHS-R1a) antagonist with an IC50 of 32 nM. JMV 2959 does not induce any intracellular calcium mobilization by itself[1].
When administered alone, it does not increase food intake and does not significantly stimulate growth hormone (GH) release[1]. JMV 2959 dose dependently decreases the startle response (F(3.42)=4.4, p
[1]. Moulin A, et al. The 1,2,4-triazole as a scaffold for the design of ghrelin receptor ligands: development of JMV 2959, a potent antagonist. Amino Acids. 2013 Feb;44(2):301-14. [2]. Engel JA, et al. Blockade of growth hormone secretagogue receptor 1A signaling by JMV 2959 attenuates the NMDAR antagonist, phencyclidine-induced impairments in prepulse inhibition. Psychopharmacology (Berl). 2015 Dec;232(23):4285-92. [3]. Clifford PS, et al. Attenuation of cocaine-induced locomotor sensitization in rats sustaining genetic or pharmacologic antagonism of ghrelin receptors. Addict Biol. 2012 Nov;17(6):956-63.
Cas No. | 925238-89-7 | SDF | |
Canonical SMILES | O=C(N[C@@H](C1=NN=C(CCC2=CC=CC=C2)N1CC3=CC=C(OC)C=C3)CC4=CNC5=C4C=CC=C5)CN | ||
分子式 | C30H32N6O2 | 分子量 | 508.61 |
溶解度 | DMSO : 25 mg/mL (49.15 mM; ultrasonic and warming and heat to 60°C); H2O : < 0.1 mg/mL (insoluble) | 储存条件 | Store at -20°C |
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10 mM | 0.1966 mL | 0.9831 mL | 1.9661 mL |
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The GHR-R antagonist JMV 2959 neither induces malaise nor alters the malaise property of LiCl in the adult male rat
The orexigenic peptide ghrelin (GHR) interacts with ghrelin receptors (GHR-Rs) to modulate brain reinforcement and feeding circuits. Pharmacological inactivation of GHR-Rs via administration of the drug JMV 2959 attenuates the rewarding/reinforcing effects of several drugs of abuse including alcohol, morphine, amphetamine and nicotine. One view of these results is that inactivation of GHR-Rs taps into brain reinforcement/feeding circuits acted upon by drugs of abuse. An alternate explanation is that JMV 2959 may induce malaise, which in turn may limit reinforcement as well as food ingestion. This is a variable of interest given that nicotine alone can induce malaise which may be enhanced by JMV 2959. In the present study, we assessed the capacity of JMV 2959 to produce malaise using a conditioned taste aversion (CTA) task. Adult male rats were allowed to consume a 0.1% sodium saccharin solution and then injected IP with either vehicle, 0.4mg/kg nicotine, 3mg/kg JMV 2959, a combination of 0.4mg/kg nicotine and 3mg/kg JMV 2959, or 32mg/kg lithium chloride (a positive control known to support induction of CTA). Lithium chloride produced a robust avoidance of the saccharin solution in subsequent 2 bottle (water and saccharin) tests, whereas JMV 2959 alone did not induce CTA. The combination of JMV 2959 and nicotine induced a moderate degree of CTA that was similar to that produced by nicotine alone. These results suggest that JMV 2959 is unlikely to limit either reinforcement or food ingestion via induction of malaise.
The 1,2,4-triazole as a scaffold for the design of ghrelin receptor ligands: development of JMV 2959, a potent antagonist
Ghrelin is a 28-residue peptide acylated with an n-octanoyl group on the Ser 3 residue, predominantly produced by the stomach. Ghrelin displays strong growth hormone (GH) releasing activity, which is mediated by the activation of the so-called GH secretagogue receptor type 1a (GHS-R1a). Given the wide spectrum of biological activities of Ghrelin in neuroendocrine and metabolic pathways, many research groups, including our group, developed synthetic peptide, and nonpeptide GHS-R1a ligands, acting as agonists, partial agonists, antagonists, or inverse agonists. In this highlight article, we will focus on the discovery of a GHS-R1a antagonist compound, JMV 2959, which has been extensively studied in different in vitro and in vivo models. We will first describe the peptidomimetic approach that led us to discover this compound. Then we will review the results obtained with this compound in different studies in the fields of food intake and obesity, addictive behaviors, hyperactivity and retinopathy.
Blockade of growth hormone secretagogue receptor 1A signaling by JMV 2959 attenuates the NMDAR antagonist, phencyclidine-induced impairments in prepulse inhibition
Rationale: Schizophrenic-spectrum patients commonly display deficits in preattentive information processing as evidenced, for example, by disrupted prepulse inhibition (PPI), a measure of sensorimotor gating. Similar disruptions in PPI can be induced in rodents and primates by the psychotomimetic drug phencyclidine (PCP), a noncompetitive inhibitor of the NMDA receptor. Mounting evidence suggests that the hunger hormone ghrelin and its constitutively active receptor influences neuronal circuits involved in the regulation of mood and cognition.
Objectives: In the present series of experiments, we investigated the effects of ghrelin and the growth hormone secretagogue receptor (GHS-R1A) neutral antagonist, JMV 2959, on acoustic startle responses (ASR), PPI, and PCP-induced alterations in PPI.
Results: Intraperitoneal (i.p.) administration of ghrelin (0.033, 0.1, and 0.33 mg/kg) did not alter the ASR or PPI in rats. Conversely, i.p. injection of JMV 2959 (1, 3, and 6 mg/kg), dose dependently decreased the ASR and increased PPI. Pretreatment with JMV 2959 at a dose with no effect on ASR or PPI per se, completely blocked PCP-induced (2 mg/kg) deficits in PPI while pretreatment with the highest dose of ghrelin did not potentiate or alter PPI responses of a sub-threshold dose of PCP (0.75 mg/kg).
Conclusion: These findings indicate that the GHS-R1A is involved in specific behavioral effects of PCP and may have relevance for patients with schizophrenia.
GHS-R1A antagonism reduces alcohol but not sucrose preference in prairie voles
Rationale: Ghrelin has been shown to mediate food and drug reward in rats and mice, and the rewarding properties of sweet foods and alcohol are known to contribute to overconsumption of these substances.
Objective: To investigate the effects of GHS-R1A antagonism in a novel animal model of high alcohol consumption, the prairie vole, and to characterize the role of ghrelin in limited access consumption of a drug (alcohol) and non-drug (sucrose) reward.
Methods: Female prairie voles were given four 2-h two-bottle drinking sessions, occurring every other day. During drinking sessions, animals had access to 20% ethanol vs water or 10% sucrose vs water. Pre-treatment with the GHS-R1A antagonist JMV 2959 (i.p.; 0.0, 9.0mg/kg Experiments 1 and 2; 0.0, 9.0, 12.0mg/kg Experiments 3 and 4.) occurred 30-min before the fourth session. To determine if the amount of exposure to sucrose sessions affected the efficacy of JMV 2959, in Experiment 5 animals were given 16 daily 2-hr drinking sessions with 10% sucrose vs water. JMV 2959 treatment (0.0 or 9.0mg/kg) occurred 30-min prior to the 16th session.
Results: JMV 2959 reduced alcohol but not sucrose preference. Even after extended experience with sucrose sessions, JMV 2959 had no effect on sucrose preference or consumption.
Conclusion: These findings demonstrate that GHS-R1A antagonism reduces alcohol preference, but suggest limitations on the role of ghrelin in the preference for and consumption of naturally rewarding substances.
Ghrelin and ghrelin receptor modulation of psychostimulant action
Ghrelin (GHR) is an orexigenic gut peptide that modulates multiple homeostatic functions including gastric emptying, anxiety, stress, memory, feeding, and reinforcement. GHR is known to bind and activate growth-hormone secretagogue receptors (termed GHR-Rs). Of interest to our laboratory has been the assessment of the impact of GHR modulation of the locomotor activation and reward/reinforcement properties of psychostimulants such as cocaine and nicotine. Systemic GHR infusions augment cocaine stimulated locomotion and conditioned place preference (CPP) in rats, as does food restriction (FR) which elevates plasma ghrelin levels. Ghrelin enhancement of psychostimulant function may occur owing to a direct action on mesolimbic dopamine function or may reflect an indirect action of ghrelin on glucocorticoid pathways. Genomic or pharmacological ablation of GHR-Rs attenuates the acute locomotor-enhancing effects of nicotine, cocaine, amphetamine and alcohol and blunts the CPP induced by food, alcohol, amphetamine and cocaine in mice. The stimulant nicotine can induce CPP and like amphetamine and cocaine, repeated administration of nicotine induces locomotor sensitization in rats. Inactivation of ghrelin circuit function in rats by injection of a ghrelin receptor antagonist (e.g., JMV 2959) diminishes the development of nicotine-induced locomotor sensitization. These results suggest a key permissive role for GHR-R activity for the induction of locomotor sensitization to nicotine. Our finding that GHR-R null rats exhibit diminished patterns of responding for intracranial self-stimulation complements an emerging literature implicating central GHR circuits in drug reward/reinforcement. Finally, antagonism of GHR-Rs may represent a smoking cessation modality that not only blocks nicotine-induced reward but that also may limit weight gain after smoking cessation.