作者
David A. Griffith,David J. Edmonds,Jean‐Philippe Fortin,Amit S. Kalgutkar,J. Brent Kuzmiski,Paula M. Loria,Aditi R. Saxena,Scott W. Bagley,Clare Buckeridge,John M. Curto,David R. Derksen,João M. Dias,Matthew C. Griffor,Seungil Han,V. Margaret Jackson,Margaret S. Landis,Daniel J. Lettiere,Chris Limberakis,Yuhang Liu,Alan M. Mathiowetz,Jayesh C. Patel,David W. Piotrowski,David A. Price,Roger B. Ruggeri,David A. Tess
摘要
Peptide agonists of the glucagon-like peptide-1 receptor (GLP-1R) have revolutionized diabetes therapy, but their use has been limited because they require injection. Herein, we describe the discovery of the orally bioavailable, small-molecule, GLP-1R agonist PF-06882961 (danuglipron). A sensitized high-throughput screen was used to identify 5-fluoropyrimidine-based GLP-1R agonists that were optimized to promote endogenous GLP-1R signaling with nanomolar potency. Incorporation of a carboxylic acid moiety provided considerable GLP-1R potency gains with improved off-target pharmacology and reduced metabolic clearance, ultimately resulting in the identification of danuglipron. Danuglipron increased insulin levels in primates but not rodents, which was explained by receptor mutagensis studies and a cryogenic electron microscope structure that revealed a binding pocket requiring a primate-specific tryptophan 33 residue. Oral administration of danuglipron to healthy humans produced dose-proportional increases in systemic exposure (NCT03309241). This opens an opportunity for oral small-molecule therapies that target the well-validated GLP-1R for metabolic health.