Two professors at Japan’s International Institute for Integrative Sleep Medicine (WPI-IIIS) at the University of Tsukuba have developed a potent compound that promotes wakefulness and remedies narcolepsy in model animals.

The discovery by Hiroshi Nagase and WPI-IIIS director Masashi Yanagisawa work is published in the Journal of Medicinal Chemistry.

“Our achievement opens up a realistic avenue towards a novel medicine for narcoleptic patients,”Nagase says in a release. “Immediately after our paper was published online, a narcoleptic patient in the US emailed us a letter of appreciation, which gave us further motivation to tackle this difficult technical challenge. We will make our best effort to keep optimizing the compound so that we will be able to provide a cure for narcolepsy in the near future.”

Orexin

The compound works to mimic the action of orexin, a wake-promoting substance in the brain. Orexin, discovered in 1998 by Yanagisawa, is a neuropeptide that plays a central role in maintaining wakefulness. Its deficiency causes called narcolepsy, in which patients experience excessive daytime sleepiness, often falling asleep uncontrollably. Patients also suffer from symptoms such as cataplexy (sudden loss of muscle tone triggered by emotion), vivid hallucinations when going into or out of sleep, and sleep paralysis. Orexin itself is proven to be effective in improving narcoleptic symptoms in model animals, but it cannot be readily used as a medicine because the blood-brain barrier prevents it from entering the brain, where orexin works by binding to its receptors. Instead, a small molecule mimicking orexin (orexin receptor agonist) should be useful as a therapeutic agent for narcolepsy.

Nagase and his colleagues designed and synthesized more than 2,000 compounds, and eventually discovered the first non-peptidic orexin receptor agonist, YNT-185. Giving YNT-185 to normal mice strongly promoted wakefulness. Moreover, YNT-185, when given to narcoleptic model mice, significantly ameliorated the symptom (unpublished data). This achievement is an important first step for development of a novel medicine to correct the fundamental disease mechanism of narcolepsy, the authors say.

Image courtesy of University of Tsukuba