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Title: Raising blood sugar level in hypoglycemic mammals
by administering inhibitors of dipeptidyl peptidase IV
United States Patent: 6,319,893
Inventors: Demuth; Hans-Ulrich (Halle/Saale, DE); Hoffmann;
Torsten (Halle/Saale, DE); Kuhn-Wache; Kerstin (Halle/Saale, DE); Rosche;
Fred (Halle/Saale, DE)
Assignee: Probiodrug (Halle, DE)
Appl. No.: 365404
Filed: August 2, 1999
Foreign Application Priority Data: Jul 31, 1998[DE] (198
34 591)
Abstract
A method of raising the blood sugar level in a mammal having
hypoglycemia is described. The method reduces degradation of glucagon by
administering to the mammal a therapeutically effective amount of an
inhibitor of dipeptidyl peptidase IV and physiologically acceptable
adjuvants and/or excipients.
Description of the Invention
The invention relates to a method in which, by reducing
dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DP IV) or DP IV-analogous enzyme activity in the
blood of a mammal by administration of activity-reducing effectors, the
endogenous (or additionally exogenously administered) glycogenolytically
active peptide glucagon or analogues thereof is/are degraded to a reduced
extent by DP IV and DP IV-like enzymes, thereby reducing or delaying the
decrease in concentration of that peptide hormone or analogues thereof.
Owing to that increased stability of (endogenous or exogenously
administered) glucagon and its analogues brought about by the action of DP
IV effectors, thereby making them available in greater number for the
glycogenolytic stimulation of the glucagon receptors of, in particular,
liver cells, the duration of activity of the body's own glucagon changes,
consequently resulting in stimulation of the catabolic carbohydrate
metabolism of the organism treated.
As a result, the blood sugar level in the serum of the treated organism
rises above the glucose concentration characteristic of hypoglycaemia.
Thereby, metabolic anomalies, such as hypoglycaemic states resulting from
reduced glucose concentrations in the blood, can be prevented or
alleviated.
In addition to proteases involved in non-specific proteolysis, which
ultimately causes the degradation of proteins into amino acids, regulatory
proteases are known which take part in the functionalisation (activation,
deactivation, modulation) of endogenous peptide active substances (Kirschke
et al., 1995; Krausslich & Wimmer, 1987). Especially in connection
with immune research and neuropeptide research, a number of such so-called
convertases, signal peptidases or enkephalinases have been discovered
(Gomez et al., 1988; Ansorge et al., 1991).
In view of the frequency with which the amino acid proline occurs in a
large number of peptide hormones and the associated structural
characteristics of those peptides, a function analogous to that of the
signal peptidases is being discussed for proline-specific peptidases (Yaron
& Naider, 1993; Walter et al., 1980; Vanhoof et al., 1995). By its
special structure, proline in those peptides determines both conformation
and stability of those peptides by protecting them from being degraded by
non-specific proteases (Kessler, 1982).
Enzymes that have a highly specific structure-altering effect on proline-containing
sequences (HIV protease, cyclophilin etc.) are attractive targets for
current active substance research. In particular for the peptidases prolyl
endopeptidase (PEP) and dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DP IV) which cleave after
the proline, relationships between modulation of the biological activity
of natural peptide substrates and their selective cleavage by those
enzymes could be made plausible. Thus, it is assumed that PEP plays a role
in learning and in the memory process and that DP IV is involved in signal
transmission during the immune response (Ishiura et al., 1990; Hegen et
al., 1990).
As with the extraordinary proline specificity of those enzymes, there is
discussion about their high selectivity for the amino acid alanine inside
typical recognition regions in substrates of those enzymes, according to
which alanine-containing peptides can adopt similar conformations to the
structurally analogous proline-containing peptides. Such properties of
alanine-containing peptide chains have recently been demonstrated by point
mutation (exchange of proline for alanine) (Dodge & Scheraga, 1996).
DP IV and DP IV-analogous activity (for example cytosolic DP II has a
substrate specificity virtually identical to that of DP IV) occurs in the
blood circulation where it removes dipeptides from the N-terminus of
biologically active peptides in a highly specific manner when proline or
alanine form the adjacent residues of the N-terminal amino acid in their
sequence. On the basis of that cleavage site specificity, it is assumed
that that enzyme and analogues are involved in the regulation of
polypeptides in vivo (Vanhoof et al., 1995).
Blood sugar concentrations that are too low may lead to pathological
states in the human or animal organism. In particular, after accidents,
so-called hypoglycaemic shock may occur which may lead in patients to
hyperorexia, sweating and even to loss of consciousness and death.
It was therefore a problem of the present invention to provide agents for
preventing or alleviating pathological metabolic anomalies of mammalian
organisms, such as acute or chronic hypoglycaemia.
In particular, it was a problem of the present invention to provide agents
by means of which carbohydrate reserves, for example of the liver, can be
rapidly mobilised.
Those problems are solved according to the invention by the use of
activity-reducing effectors of dipeptidyl peptidase IV (DP IV) and DP
IV-analogous enzyme activity to raise the blood sugar level in a mammalian
organism.
It is already known to use activity-reducing effectors of DP IV to lower
the blood sugar level of mammalian organisms. In so doing, the degradation
of incretins, which stimulate glucose disposal, by DP IV is stopped.
It is therefore especially surprising that activity-reducing effectors of
DP IV and DP IV-analogous enzyme activity can be used to raise the blood
sugar level. Presumably, that effect relies on the following mechanisms:
In glucose metabolism and catabolism in the human and animal body, a
distinction can be made in principle between two phases:
1. In the first phase, following food intake, increased release of
incretins takes place (i.e. hormones that stimulate insulin secretion of
the pancreas, such as gastric inhibitory polypeptide 1-42 (GIP1-42)
and glucagon-like peptide amide-1 7-36 (GLP-17-36)), resulting
in increased insulin production and, as a consequence, in increased
degradation of the glucose supplied by food intake.
Incretins are, however, substrates of DP IV, since the latter is able to
remove the dipeptides tyrosinyl alanine and histidyl alanine from the
N-terminal sequences of incretins in vitro and in situ (Mentlein et al.,
1993). Consequently, if DP IV is present, degradation of the incretins
occurs, which in turn leads to reduced glucose disposal.
By inhibiting the DP IV and DP IV-analogous enzyme activity in vivo,
therefore, it is possible effectively to suppress excessive degradation of
the incretins and consequently to increase glucose disposal:
DP IV inhibition leads to stabilisation of the incretins,
the extended life of the incretins in the blood circulation intensifies
their insulinotropic and insulin-sensitising action,
the consequently increased and more effective insulin release brings with
it an increased glucose tolerance (Demuth et al., 1996).
It has been demonstrated in diabetic rats that the corresponding DP IV
inhibitors can be used effectively to modulate the control system
described (Pederson et al., 1998). That phase lasts approximately 120
minutes from the time of food intake.
After that so-called postprandial phase has elapsed, the secretion of
incretins is stopped and any already existing incretins are degraded by DP
IV. As a result, insulin production falls, bringing glucose disposal to an
end.
2. In order to maintain the physiologically necessary glucose
concentration of approximately 5.5 mmol/l between food intakes, in the
second phase stored glycogen is degraded, for which glucagon is released
from the pancreatic A-cells. Glucagon has, therefore, an opposite effect
to insulin and hence also to the incretins.
In the case of three meals a day, the human body is accordingly under
GLP-1/GIP and insulin control for approximately 6 hours (3.times.120
minutes), but under glucagon control for 18 hours.
It has been established that DP IV is endogenously released from the same
secretory granules of the A-cells as glucagon and that that release may
take place simultaneously with the release of glucagon and the onset of
glucagon action. According to the invention, it has now been found that
glucagon both in vitro and in vivo is degraded and thereby deactivated by
DP IV and DP IV-analogous enzyme activity, see FIG. 1, as a result of
which the release of glycogen and consequently of glucose is retarded or
stopped. That fact was completely surprising, since it had previously been
assumed that, as mentioned above, DP IV causes only lowering of the blood
sugar level.
The possibility therefore presents itself, according to the invention, of
promoting the release of endogenous stored glucose from glycogen by means
of glucagon by influencing DP IV activity and analogous activities;
simultaneous stimulation of glucose disposal does not occur, since no
incretins are secreted in the human organism approximately 2 hours after
meals.
The invention is based, therefore, on the surprising discovery that a
reduction of the DP IV or DP IV-like enzyme activity taking place in the
blood circulation leads causally to influencing of the blood sugar level.
It has been found that
1. reduction of DP IV and DP IV-analogous activity results in increased
stability of externally supplied or endogenously circulating glucagon,
that is to say, by administering effectors of DP IV and DP IV-analogous
proteins, glucagon degradation in the blood can be controlled;
2. by increasing the stability of endogenously circulating or externally
supplied glucagon, a controllable modulation of the blood glucose level
occurs.
The invention accordingly relates to the use of effectors of dipeptidyl
peptidase IV (DP IV) and DP IV-analogous enzyme activity to raise the
blood sugar level in the serum of a mammalian organism above the glucose
concentration characteristic of hypoglycaemia.
The invention relates especially to the use and administration of
effectors of DP IV and DP IV-analogous enzyme activity in and to mammals
for the prevention or alleviation of pathological metabolic anomalies of
mammalian organisms. Such an anomaly may be, for example, acute or chronic
hypoglycaemia where rapid mobilisation of carbohydrate reserves of the
liver is necessary.
In another preferred embodiment, the invention relates to use and a method
for raising the blood sugar level in the serum of a mammalian organism
above the glucose concentration characteristic of hypoglycaemia. For that
purpose, a therapeutically effective amount of an effector of DP IV and DP
IV-analogous enzyme activity may be administered to a mammalian organism.
A significant advantage of the present invention is the low burden imposed
on the organism, since only small doses of external hormone, if any, need
to be administered: according to the invention, glucagon degradation is
decelerated or completely stopped by the use of the DP IV inhibitors of
the invention, so that, in the organism of an adult human, typically a
quantity of administered or endogenously released glucagon of from 2 pmol
to 200 pmol is maintained. Too rapid a proteolytic degradation is
prevented.
The effectors of DP IV and DP IV-analogous enzymes administered according
to the invention may be used in pharmaceutically administrable formulation
complexes as inhibitors, substrates, pseudosubstrates, inhibitors of DP IV
expression, binding proteins or antibodies to those enzyme proteins or
combinations of those different substances that reduce the DP IV or DP
IV-analogous protein concentration in the mammalian organism. Effectors
used according to the invention are, for example, DP IV inhibitors, such
as the dipeptide derivatives and dipeptide mimetics alanyl-pyrolidine,
isoleucyl-thiazolidine, and the pseudosubstrate N-valyl-prolyl, O-benzoyl
hydroxylamine or salts thereof, especially fumarates thereof. Such
compounds are known from the literature or can be manufactured analogously
to the methods described in the literature (Demuth, 1990).
The method of the invention represents a novel procedure for raising
lowered blood glucose concentration in the serum of mammals. It is simple,
capable of commercial exploitation and suitable for use in human medicine
in the treatment especially of diseases that result from below-average
blood glucose values.
The effectors may be used in the form of pharmaceutical preparations that
contain the active ingredient in combination with customary excipients
known from the prior art and/or customary adjuvants. They are
administered, for example, parenterally (for example i.v., in
physiological saline solution) or enterally (for example orally,
formulated with customary excipients such as, for example, glucose).
Depending upon their endogenous stability and bio-availability and upon
the severity of the condition, single or multiple doses of the effectors
may be administered to obtain the desired normalisation of the blood
glucose values. For example, in the case of aminoacyl-thiazolidines, such
a dosage range may he from 0.1 mg to 10 mg of effector substance per
kilogram. The effectors are preferably administered approximately 120
minutes after food intake. The effectors may also be used together with or
at short intervals from glucagon or analogues thereof.
Claim 1 of 4 Claims
What is claimed is:
1. A method of raising the blood sugar level in a mammal having
hypoglycemia by reducing degradation of glucagon, said method comprising
administering to said mammal a therapeutically effective amount of an
inhibitor of dipeptidyl peptidase (DP IV) and physiologically acceptable
adjuvants and/or excipients for reducing in said mammal activity of
endogenous DP IV.
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