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아나글립틴 C화학적 특성, 용도, 생산
개요
Anagliptin is a dipeptidyl peptidase-4 (DPP-4) inhibitor that was approved
in Japan in November 2012 for the treatment of patients with Type 2 diabetes
mellitus (T2DM).
Anagliptin (also known asSK-0403) is a treatment for diabetes based on inhibition of DPP-4, an enzyme that is responsible for degradation of glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1), a 30-amino acid peptide that is secreted in response to food intake. GLP-1 stimulates
insulin secretion and inhibits glucagon secretion, which leads to lower
levels of plasma glucose. Following the introduction of the first DPP-4 inhibitor, sitagliptin, in 2006, several members of the gliptin class have been approved worldwide. Anagliptin was discovered from an effort to replace
a metabolically labile isoindoline group from an earlier DPP-4 inhibitor series with a stable bioisostere. Anagliptin is a potent DPP-4 inhibitor, with an IC50=3.8 nM and >10,000-fold selectivity over inhibition of DPP-8 and DPP-9.
Clinical Use
Anagliptin, which is marketed as Beskoa or Suiny, is a dipeptidyl peptidase–IV (DPP-4) inhibitor
which was approved in September 2012 and launched in November 2012 in Japan for the treatment of
Type II diabetes. The drug was co-developed by three Japanese companies; Kowa, Sanwa Kagaku and
JW pharmaceutical. Anagliptin, which is more selective against several recombinant human proteases by comparison to sitagliptin and vildagliptin, has more than 10,000-fold selectivity over the
structurally homologous DPP-8 and DPP-9 enzymes.