In vivo and in vitro characterization of antalarmin, a nonpeptide corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) receptor antagonist: suppression of pituitary ACTH release and peripheral inflammation. — Elizabeth Webster (1996) | RDL Network
In vivo and in vitro characterization of antalarmin, a nonpeptide corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) receptor antagonist: suppression of pituitary ACTH release and peripheral inflammation.
Article 1996 en
Authors
EW
Elizabeth Webster
DL
David B. Lewis
DT
David J. Torpy
Abstract
1 min read
Corticotropin-releasing hormone (CRH) secreted from the hypothalamus is the major regulator of pituitary ACTH release and consequent glucocorticoid secretion. CRH secreted in the periphery also acts as a proinflammatory modulator. CRH receptors (CRH-R1, R2alpha, R2beta) exhibit a specific tissue distribution. Antalarmin, a novel pyrrolopyrimidine compound, displaced 12SI-oCRH binding in rat pituitary, frontal cortex and cerebellum, but not heart, consistent with antagonism at the CRHR1 receptor. In vivo antalarmnin (20 mg/kg body wt.) significantly inhibited CRH-stimulated ACTH release and carageenin-induced subcutaneous inflammation in rats. Antalarmin, or its analogs, hold therapeutic promise in disorders with putative CRH hypersecretion, such as melancholic depression and inflammatory disorders.
SR Bornstein, Elizabeth Webster, David J. Torpy, Sara Richman, Nicholas Mitsiades, Michael Igel, David B. Lewis, Kenner C. Rice, Hans‐Georg Joost, Maria Tsokos, George Chrousos
Elizabeth Webster, Ruth M. Barrientos, Carlo Contoreggi, Mitchel G Isaac, Sophie Ligier, K. Eddie Gabry, George Chrousos, Edward F. McCarthy, Kenner C. Rice, Philip W. Gold, Esther M. Sternberg
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