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Tavapadon

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(Redirected from PF-6649751)

Tavapadon
Clinical data
Other namesCVL-751; PF-6649751; PF-06649751
Routes of
administration
By mouth[1]
Drug classDopamine receptor agonist
Identifiers
  • (−)-(6Ξ)-1,5-dimethyl-6-(2-methyl-4-[(3-[trifluoromethyl]pyridin-2-yl)oxy]phenyl)pyrimidine-2,4(1H,3H)-dione
CAS Number
PubChem CID
ChemSpider
UNII
KEGG
ChEMBL
CompTox Dashboard (EPA)
Chemical and physical data
FormulaC19H16F3N3O3
Molar mass391.350 g·mol−1
3D model (JSmol)
  • CC1=C(C=CC(=C1)OC2=C(C=CC=N2)C(F)(F)F)C3=C(C(=O)NC(=O)N3C)C
  • InChI=1S/C19H16F3N3O3/c1-10-9-12(28-17-14(19(20,21)22)5-4-8-23-17)6-7-13(10)15-11(2)16(26)24-18(27)25(15)3/h4-9H,1-3H3,(H,24,26,27)
  • Key:AKQXQLUNFKDZBN-UHFFFAOYSA-N

Tavapadon (developmental code names CVL-751, PF-06649751) is a dopamine receptor agonist which is under development for the treatment of Parkinson's disease.[2][3][4] It is under development by Cerevel Therapeutics, which acquired tavapadon from Pfizer in 2018.[2] It is taken by mouth.[1]

Tavapadon acts as a highly selective partial agonist of the dopamine D1 receptor (Ki = 9 nM; IATooltip Intrinsic activity = 65%) and the dopamine D5 receptor (Ki = 13 nM; IA = 81%).[3][4][1] It has no significant affinity or functional activity at the D2-like receptors (D2, D3, D4) (Ki ≥ 4,870 to 6,720 nM).[1] Tavapadon also shows biased agonism for Gs-coupled signaling at the D1-like receptors.[1][3]

As of December 2024, tavapadon has completed phase 3 clinical trials for Parkinson's disease.[2]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Bezard E, Gray D, Kozak R, Leoni M, Combs C, Duvvuri S (2024). "Rationale and Development of Tavapadon, a D1/D5-Selective Partial Dopamine Agonist for the Treatment of Parkinson's Disease". CNS Neurol Disord Drug Targets. 23 (4): 476–487. doi:10.2174/1871527322666230331121028. PMC 10909821. PMID 36999711. Tavapadon is a highly selective partial agonist at D1 and D5 dopamine receptors, [52] with little to no functional activity at D2, D3, or D4 receptors in vitro (unpublished data). Assays measuring the displacement of radioligand binding in cell lines expressing recombinant human dopamine receptors have shown that tavapadon has a high affinity for both D1 (Ki = 9 nM) and D5 (Ki = 13 nM) (unpublished data). Conversely, tavapadon had a low affinity at D2 (Ki ≥ 6210 nM), D3 (Ki ≥ 6720 nM), and D4 (Ki ≥ 4870 nM) (unpublished data). [...] In vitro assays of functional activity have confirmed that tavapadon acts as a partial agonist by binding at D1 and D5 receptors, corresponding to 65% and 81% of dopamine's intrinsic activity, respectively, and inducing functional receptor activation, with half-maximal effective concentration (EC50) values of 19 nM and 17 nM (unpublished data).
  2. ^ a b c "Tavapadon - Cerevel Therapeutics". Adis Insight. Springer Nature Switzerland AG.
  3. ^ a b c Cerri S, Blandini F (December 2020). "An update on the use of non-ergot dopamine agonists for the treatment of Parkinson's disease". Expert Opinion on Pharmacotherapy. 21 (18): 2279–2291. doi:10.1080/14656566.2020.1805432. PMID 32804544. S2CID 221163451.
  4. ^ a b Hall A, Provins L, Valade A (January 2019). "Novel Strategies To Activate the Dopamine D1 Receptor: Recent Advances in Orthosteric Agonism and Positive Allosteric Modulation". Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 62 (1): 128–140. doi:10.1021/acs.jmedchem.8b01767. PMID 30525590. S2CID 54469910.