Antiparkinson prodrugs.

Di Stefano A, Sozio P, Cerasa LS
Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) 2008
Open on PubMed

Parkinson's disease (PD) is a progressive, neurodegenerative disorder which involves the loss of dopaminergic neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta. Current therapy is essentially symptomatic, and L-Dopa (LD), the direct precursor of dopamine(DA), is the treatment of choice in more advanced stages of the disease. Substitution therapy with LD is, however, associated with a number of acute problems. The peripheral conversion of LD by amino acid decarboxylase (AADC) to DA is responsible for the typical gastrointestinal (nausea, emesis) and cardiovascular (arrhythmia, hypotension) side effects. To minimize the conversion to DA outside the central nervous system (CNS) LD is usually given in combination with peripheral inhibitors of AADC (carbidopa and benserazide). In spite of that, other central nervous side effects such as dyskinesia, on-off phenomenon and end-of-dose deterioration still remain. The main factors responsible for the poor bioavailability and the wide range of inter- and intra-patient variations of plasma levels are the drug's physical-chemical properties: low water and lipid solubility, resulting in unfavourable partition, and the high susceptibility to chemical and enzymatic degradation. In order to improve the bioavailability, the prodrug approach appeared to be the most promising and some LD prodrugs have been prepared in an effort to solve these problems. We report here a review of progress in antiparkinson prodrugs, focusing on chemical structures mainly related to LD, DA and dopaminergic agonists.

24 Figures Extracted
Scheme 1
Scheme 1 PMC
Dopamine biosynthesis.
Figure 1
Figure 1 PMC
Scheme 2
Scheme 2 PMC
DA delivery from pyridinium/dihydropyridine redox carrier system.
Figure 2
Figure 2 PMC
Glycosyl DA derivatives.
Figure 3
Figure 3 PMC
Chemical structures of glycosuccinyl-derivatives of DA.
Figure 4
Figure 4 PMC
Chemical structures of di- and tripeptides of LD.
Figure 5
Figure 5 PMC
Figure 6
Figure 6 PMC
Chemical structures of LD esters.
Figure 7
Figure 7 PMC
Kinetic model of LD prodrugs following the nasal administration as proposed by Kao et al . [ 5 ].
Figure 8
Figure 8 PMC
Chemical structures of glycosyl-derivatives of LD.
Figure 9
Figure 9 PMC
Figure 10
Figure 10 PMC
Figure 11
Figure 11 PMC
Figure 12
Figure 12 PMC
Figure 13
Figure 13 PMC
Multifunctional LD and DA codrugs, containing antioxidant molecules.
Figure 14
Figure 14 PMC
Figure 15
Figure 15 PMC
Figure 16
Figure 16 PMC
Chemical structures of (-)-3-PPP prodrugs.
Figure 17
Figure 17 PMC
Figure 18
Figure 18 PMC
Figure 19
Figure 19 PMC
Bioactivation of compound S-PD148903 [ 86 ].
Figure 20
Figure 20 PMC
Scheme 3
Scheme 3 PMC
An oxime acting as a “cascade” prodrug of a catecholamine [ 88 ].
Scheme 4
Scheme 4 PMC
“ In vivo ” activation of enone prodrug (-)- 128 [ 89 ].