Ligand Pharmaceuticals, Inc., San Diego, California 92121
Address correspondence and requests for reprints to: Andrés Negro-Vilar, Ligand Pharmaceuticals, 10275 Science Center Drive, San Diego, California 92121. E-mail: anegrovilar{at}ligand.com
Androgen therapy, using injectable, oral and more recently, transdermal preparations, has been available to physicians for many years to treat a variety of male disorders; to a lesser degree, their use has been extended to some female indications. Unlike female sex hormone therapies, which have found extensive use and applications in the fields of hormone replacement, reproductive disorders, gynecological cancers, and contraception, androgen therapy has not been widespread.
A more widely accepted use of androgen therapy has been hampered by the lack of orally active preparations with good efficacy and, particularly, a safe profile. Progress has been limited over the last three decades in developing synthetic molecules that could separate androgenic activities considered desirable (i.e., anabolic) from others that were undesirable or had dose-limiting side effects (1). The abuse of synthetic anabolic steroids by athletes and body builders has contributed to the general perception of certain negative side effects (i.e., aggressive behavior), effects that we do not expect to see with replacement regimens of testosterone or other androgen receptor agonists that target judicious restoration of physiological functions normally regulated by endogenous androgens.
Recent advances clearly indicate that androgen therapy is about to experience a fundamental change, both in the extent of use and in the range of applications that may benefit from these upcoming advances. Several factors have and will continue to contribute to this change. First, the significant advances of hormone replacement therapy (HRT) in postmenopausal females and the expansion and application of HRT to treat and prevent major disorders such as osteoporosis, cardiovascular disease, breast cancer, mood and cognition, among others, have clearly established the value of novel HRT therapies for improving womens health (2, 3, 4), and by extrapolation, they clearly point out the potential for similar approaches to address mens health disorders. Second, the development and marketing of novel selective estrogen receptor modulators (SERMs) has provided both preclinical and clinical proof-of-concept that we can develop molecules with a great degree of tissue selectivity targeting the estrogen receptor to eliminate undesired side effects and to maintain (and in the future to enhance) the positive, protective effects of selective transcriptional receptor activation (3, 4, 5, 6, 7). Third, significant advances in our understanding of nuclear receptor activation and function have provided the molecular underpinnings for new drug development efforts to design and bring forward a new generation of tissue-selective molecules targeting steroid and other nuclear receptors. Proof-of-concept for tissue selectivity has now been extended to many compounds interacting with different nuclear receptors, such as the estrogen (ER), progesterone (PR), androgen (AR), retinoid (RAR/RXR), and peroxisome proliferation activated receptors (PPARs), among others (6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11).
With the information described above, we have been able to chart a development path and create a profile of desired activity and selective indications for a new class of molecules targeting the androgen receptor. We have chosen the term selective androgen receptor modulators (SARMs) after the terminology currently used for similar molecules targeting the estrogen receptor. Below we briefly describe the molecular mechanisms underlying the potential for selective modulation of AR by different ligands and the opportunities that novel SARMs bring to therapies for broad, as well as selective, uses of androgen therapy, in men as well as in women.
Molecular Advances in AR Structure and Function: A Key to Unlocking Tissue Selectivity
The AR is a transcription factor and a member of the extended family of nuclear receptors. As such, it shares significant homology in terms of structure with the other members of the family, including specific protein subdomains that either activate or repress gene activity. Current evidence indicates that these activation domains represent surfaces in the receptor that are induced or exposed upon hormone or ligand-binding in such a manner that they facilitate the interaction of the specific domain or surface with selected proteins named coactivators or corepressors (5, 12). These proteins are part of an expanding family of molecules, and several have been found to bind directly to AR, namely CBP/p300 (13), GRIP1 (14), ARA 54,55 and 70 (15, 16), and Tip60 (17). Each selective ligand, upon binding to the receptor, may drive it into a distinct conformation that exposes activation or interaction surfaces resulting in recruitment of specific cofactors as revealed by structural studies (12). In addition, tissue expression or relative concentration of different cofactors may vary. Recently, a testis-specific cofactor, ARIP-3, has been described (18) that modulates AR-dependent transcriptional activity. Motif-driven interactions have been described that can modify the affinity of a given cofactor for a nuclear receptor. These motifs, termed nuclear boxes, are contained within distinct segments of conserved sequences in the ligand-binding domain.
The AR is widely distributed among reproductive and nonreproductive tissues, including the prostate and seminal vesicles, male and female external genitalia, skin, testis, ovary, cartilage, sebaceous glands, hair follicles, sweat glands, cardiac muscle, skeletal muscle and smooth muscle, gastrointestinal vesicular cells, thyroid follicular cells, adrenal cortex, liver, pineal, and numerous brain cortical and subcortical regions, including spinal motor neurons. This wide distribution of the receptor needs to be mapped with the particular type and concentration of cofactors that are present in each tissue and cell type. This will provide a more accurate picture of the potential nuclear receptor complex that can be assembled in each case after ligand activation. Availability of this information will help define the types of responses that different SARMs may elicit in a particular tissue.
These multiple mechanisms contribute to the combinatorial recruitment and activity of coactivators and corepressors to provide selective regulation of individual genes in specific tissues by the AR. Because different ligands can provide a myriad of different combinatorial regulations of transcription in different tissues and cells, development of SARMs with intrinsic partial agonist activity offers a unique opportunity to develop new therapeutic agents with distinct activity profiles.
Recently, a novel family of nonsteroidal molecules has been identified with selectivity and specificity for the AR (9, 19). Using molecular screening approaches targeting the transcriptional activation of the human AR, combined with discriminatory cellular assays and medicinal chemistry structure-activity efforts, several series of distinct molecules have been synthesized that possess antagonist, agonist, or partial-agonist activity. The latter represent a unique group of molecules that provide the needed diversity of ligands to fully explore the utility and activities of SARMs.
The different series of molecules contain individual members that display selective preferences for certain tissues or activities (i.e., trophic in muscle, strong or very weak gonadotropin feedback) and widely diverse ratios of activity in sex accessory tissues (prostate, seminal vesicles) vs. other peripheral (i.e., muscle) or central nervous system responses. Therefore, groups of molecules are identified that provide a range of activities, from full agonist to partial agonist with distinct tissue selectivity and unique therapeutic potential.
The role of SARMs in androgen therapy and the distinct clinical applications for which they may be targeted are discussed below.
Role of SARMs in Androgen Therapy for Men
Currently used androgenic formulations for replacement therapy are
largely restricted to injectable or skin delivery formulations of
testosterone or testosterone esters. Marketed injectable forms of
testosterone esters (such as testosterone enanthate, propionate, or
cypionate) produce undesirable fluctuations in testosterone blood
levels, with supraphysiological concentrations early, and subnormal
levels towards the end of the period before the next injection,
providing an unsatisfactory profile and in some cases undesired side
effects. Skin patches do provide a better blood level profile of
testosterone, but skin irritation and daily application still limit the
usefulness and acceptability of this form of therapy (1, 20, 21, 22). Oral
preparations such as fluoxymesterone and 17-methyltestosterone are
not currently used due to concerns about liver toxicity linked to the
17
-alkyl group and because of somewhat lower efficacy. Thus, these
compounds are considered obsolete (1, 20) and do not represent a viable
form of therapy.
The discovery and development of SARMs provides the opportunity to
design molecules that are not only orally active, but that target AR in
different tissues to elicit the desired activity for each of the key
indications benefiting from androgen therapy. The desired activity
profile of novel SARMs is described in Table 1. For simplicity, we have
listed the desired activity in tissues or specific parameters for one
specific indication (i.e., male hypogonadism) side by side
with a category for selected indications. The latter provides a menu of
choices for the design of molecules that can address very specific
needs in the treatment of different disorders. Thus, we envision that
an ideal SARM for the treatment of primary or secondary male
hypogonadism (Table 1
) would have the following profile: orally active,
ideally with a pharmacokinetic profile consistent with once a
day administration, capable of stimulating prostate, seminal vesicles,
and other sex accessory tissues at doses equipotent to those needed to
provide increases in muscle mass and strength and fat-free mass,
support bone growth, and maintain/restore libido, virilization, and
male habitus. Unlike testosterone which, when converted to DHT in the
prostate has an enhanced proliferative activity in relation to other
peripheral tissues, these SARMs are not substrates for 5
-reductase
activity, nor do they affect the activity of the enzyme. Other
activities that are considered undesirable should be diminished or
eliminated, such as potential liver toxicity, blood pressure effects
and fluid retention, induction of gynecomastia, and overstimulation of
erythropoiesis. On the other hand, use of SARMs for selected
indications provides the rationale for developing molecules with
distinct tissue specificity. For example, if the target is bone growth
in elderly men with osteopenia or osteoporosis, but with no overt signs
of hypogonadism, a more anabolic SARM with clear effects on bone and
muscle, but lesser activity on prostate or other sex accessory tissues
would be more desirable.
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The Role of SARMs in Androgen Therapy for Women
If the use of androgens for men has been limited because of the type of preparations available and because of some safety concerns, the application of androgen therapy to womens health has been hampered by additional factors, namely:
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Received August 3, 1999.
Accepted August 12, 1999.
References