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result(s) for
"Sandner, Peter"
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The Impact of the Nitric Oxide (NO)/Soluble Guanylyl Cyclase (sGC) Signaling Cascade on Kidney Health and Disease: A Preclinical Perspective
by
Sandner, Peter
,
Kraehling, Jan
,
Krishnan, Shalini
in
Animals
,
Cyclic GMP - metabolism
,
Humans
2018
Chronic Kidney Disease (CKD) is a highly prevalent disease with a substantial medical need for new and more efficacious treatments. The Nitric Oxide (NO), soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC), cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) signaling cascade regulates various kidney functions. cGMP directly influences renal blood flow, renin secretion, glomerular function, and tubular exchange processes. Downregulation of NO/sGC/cGMP signaling results in severe kidney pathologies such as CKD. Therefore, treatment strategies aiming to maintain or increase cGMP might have beneficial effects for the treatment of progressive kidney diseases. Within this article, we review the NO/sGC/cGMP signaling cascade and its major pharmacological intervention sites. We specifically focus on the currently known effects of cGMP on kidney function parameters. Finally, we summarize the preclinical evidence for kidney protective effects of NO-donors, PDE inhibitors, sGC stimulators, and sGC activators.
Journal Article
The 10th International Conference on cGMP 2022: recent trends in cGMP research and development—meeting report
by
Sandner, Peter
,
Schmidtko, Achim
,
Russwurm, Michael
in
Achondroplasia
,
Biomedical and Life Sciences
,
Biomedicine
2023
Increasing cGMP is a unique therapeutic principle, and drugs inhibiting cGMP-degrading enzymes or stimulating cGMP production are approved for the treatment of various diseases such as erectile dysfunction, coronary artery disease, pulmonary hypertension, chronic heart failure, irritable bowel syndrome, or achondroplasia. In addition, cGMP-increasing therapies are preclinically profiled or in clinical development for quite a broad set of additional indications, e.g., neurodegenerative diseases or different forms of dementias, bone formation disorders, underlining the pivotal role of cGMP signaling pathways. The fundamental understanding of the signaling mediated by nitric oxide-sensitive (soluble) guanylyl cyclase and membrane-associated receptor (particulate) guanylyl cyclase at the molecular and cellular levels, as well as in vivo, especially in disease models, is a key prerequisite to fully exploit treatment opportunities and potential risks that could be associated with an excessive increase in cGMP. Furthermore, human genetic data and the clinical effects of cGMP-increasing drugs allow back-translation into basic research to further learn about signaling and treatment opportunities. The biannual international cGMP conference, launched nearly 20 years ago, brings all these aspects together as an established and important forum for all topics from basic science to clinical research and pivotal clinical trials. This review summarizes the contributions to the “10th cGMP Conference on cGMP Generators, Effectors and Therapeutic Implications,” which was held in Augsburg in 2022 but will also provide an overview of recent key achievements and activities in the field of cGMP research.
Journal Article
Runcaciguat, a novel soluble guanylate cyclase activator, shows renoprotection in hypertensive, diabetic, and metabolic preclinical models of chronic kidney disease
2021
Chronic kidney diseaQueryse (CKD) is associated with oxidative stress which can interrupt the nitric oxide (NO)/soluble guanylyl cyclase (sGC) signaling and decrease cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cGMP) production. Low cGMP concentrations can cause kidney damage and progression of CKD. The novel sGC activator runcaciguat targets the oxidized and heme-free form of sGC, restoring cGMP production under oxidative stress. The purpose of this study is to investigate if runcaciguat could provide an effective treatment for CKD. Runcaciguat was used for the treatment not only in rat CKD models with different etiologies and comorbidities, namely of hypertensive rats, the renin transgenic (RenTG) rat, and angiotensin-supplemented (ANG-SD) rat, but also in rats with diabetic and metabolic CKD, the Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) rat. The treatment duration was 2 to 42 weeks and runcaciguat was applied orally in doses from 1 to 10 mg/kg/bid. In these different rat CKD models, runcaciguat significantly reduced proteinuria (urinary protein to creatinine ratio; uPCR). These effects were also significant at doses which did not or only moderately decrease systemic blood pressure. Moreover, runcaciguat significantly decreased kidney injury biomarkers and attenuated morphological kidney damages. In RenTG rats, runcaciguat improved survival rates and markers of heart injury. These data demonstrate that the sGC activator runcaciguat exhibits cardio-renal protection at doses which did not reduce blood pressure and was effective in hypertensive as well as diabetic and metabolic CKD models. These data, therefore, suggest that runcaciguat, with its specific mode of action, represents an efficient treatment approach for CKD and associated CV diseases.
Graphical abstract
Journal Article
Stimulators of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) inhibit experimental skin fibrosis of different aetiologies
2015
ObjectivesStimulators of the soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) have recently been shown to inhibit transforming growth factor-β signalling. Here, we aimed to demonstrate that riociguat, the drug candidate for clinical trials in systemic sclerosis (SSc), is effective in experimental fibrosis and to compare its efficacy to that of phosphodiesterase V inhibitors that also increase the intracellular levels of cyclic guanosine monophosphate.MethodsThe antifibrotic effects of riociguat and sildenafil were compared in the tight-skin 1 model, in bleomycin-induced fibrosis and in a model of sclerodermatous chronic graft-versus-host-disease (cGvHD). Doses of 0.1–3 mg/kg twice a day for riociguat and of 3–10 mg/kg twice a day for sildenafil were used.ResultRiociguat dose-dependently reduced skin thickening, myofibroblast differentiation and accumulation of collagen with potent antifibrotic effects at 1 and 3 mg/kg. Riociguat also ameliorated fibrosis of the gastrointestinal tract in the cGvHD model. The antifibrotic effects were associated with reduced phosphorylation of extracellular signal-regulated kinases. Sildenafil at doses of 3 and 10 mg/kg exerted mild antifibrotic effects that were significantly less pronounced compared with 1 and 3 mg/kg riociguat.ConclusionsThese data demonstrated potent antifibrotic effects of riociguat on experimental skin and organ fibrosis. These findings suggest a role for riociguat for the treatment of fibrotic diseases, especially for the treatment of SSc. A phase II study with riociguat in patients with SSc is currently starting.
Journal Article
sGC stimulation lowers elevated blood pressure in a new canine model of resistant hypertension
by
Sandner, Peter
,
Balitzki, Jakob
,
Dinh, Wilfried
in
Animals
,
Antihypertensives
,
Blood Pressure
2021
Therapy-resistant hypertension is a serious medical problem, causing end-organ damage, stroke, and heart failure if untreated. Since the standard of care fails in resistant hypertension patients, there is still a substantial unmet medical need for effective therapies. Active stimulation of soluble guanylyl cyclase via novel soluble guanylyl cyclase stimulators might provide an effective treatment option. To test this hypothesis, we established a new experimental dog model and investigated the effects of the soluble guanylyl cyclase-stimulator BAY 41-2272. In beagle dogs, a resistant hypertension phenotype was established by combining unilateral renal wrapping with the occlusion of the renal artery in the contralateral kidney. The most frequently used antihypertensive drugs were administered orally, either alone or in combination, and their acute effect on telemetric measured blood pressure was assessed and compared with that of BAY 41-2272. The chosen disease stimulus led to a moderate and stable increase in blood pressure. Even high doses of standard-of-care antihypertensives only slightly decreased blood pressure. In contrast, the administration of the soluble guanylyl cyclase stimulator BAY 41-2272 as standalone therapy led to a dose-dependent reduction in blood pressure (−14.1 ± 1.8 mmHg). Moreover, BAY 41-2272 could also further decrease blood pressure in addition to a triple combination of standard-of-care antihypertensives (−28.6 ± 13.2 mmHg). BAY 41-2272 was highly efficient as a standalone treatment in resistant hypertension but was also effective in addition to standard-of-care treatment. These data strongly suggest that soluble guanylyl cyclase stimulators might provide an effective pharmacologic therapy for patients with resistant hypertension.
Journal Article
Effects of soluble guanylyl cyclase stimulation on muscle oxygenation and exercise capacity in heart failure with mildly reduced ejection fraction
by
Sandner, Peter
,
Schulze, Kiana M.
,
McCoach, Tyler E.
in
Animals
,
cardiovascular disease
,
Congestive heart failure
2026
Heart failure (HF) with a mildly reduced ejection fraction (HFmrEF; 40%–49%) is present in ≤25% of HF patients. Therapeutic treatment options for HFmrEF‐associated exercise intolerance are limited. Nitric oxide (NO)‐independent stimulation of soluble guanylyl cyclase to improve peripheral vasodilatation offers a novel approach to enhance skeletal muscle oxygenation (interstitial pressure of O2) and exercise capacity. We tested the hypotheses that the soluble guanylyl cyclase stimulator BAY 41‐2272 (BAY41) would increase exercise tolerance, skeletal muscle interstitial pressure of O2 during contractions and NO sensitivity in rats with HFmrEF. Healthy Sprague–Dawley rats (n = 20) and rats with experimentally induced HFmrEF (n = 25) (3–4 months old) were used for this investigation. HFmrEF was confirmed via echocardiography, and rats were randomized and treated with 1.0 mg/kg of BAY41 or vehicle for 2 weeks, followed by exercise testing and spinotrapezius muscle phosphorescence quenching measurements during 1 Hz contractions. The HFmrEF rats had a lower exercise capacity than healthy rats (834 ± 169 vs. 1138 ± 214 s; p < 0.001). BAY41 increased exercise capacity (1158 ± 223 s; p = 0.006) and muscle oxygenation index (1461 ± 427 vs. 1108 ± 239 mmHg·s; p = 0.047) during 1 Hz contractions versus HFmrEF vehicle control rats. Sodium nitroprusside superfusion elicited a faster response time in BAY41‐treated HFmrEF rats versus vehicle‐treated control animals (150 ± 58 vs. 220 ± 50 s; p = 0.022). After sodium nitroprusside superfusion, BAY41‐treated HFmrEF rats had a significantly elevated muscle oxygenation index during steady‐state contractions versus vehicle‐treated control animals (3104 ± 703 vs. 2365 ± 682 mmHg·s; p = 0.027). These data suggest that stimulation with soluble guanylyl cyclase can improve skeletal muscle oxygenation and increase the exercise capacity in HFmrEF rats, potentially via enhanced vascular smooth muscle NO sensitivity. What is the central question of this study? Soluble guanylyl cyclase stimulators are currently used to treat worsening heart failure but might be more effective at increasing exercise capacity in moderate disease states, specifically heart failure with mildly reduced ejection fraction (HFmrEF). What is the main finding and its importance? We measured exercise tolerance during treadmill running and skeletal muscle oxygen delivery‐to‐utilization matching in rats with HFmrEF (ejection fraction 40%–49%) and found that administration of a soluble guanylyl cyclase stimulator improved exercise tolerance and skeletal muscle oxygenation during contractions owing, in part, to increased sensitivity to nitric oxide donation.
Journal Article
Inhaled mosliciguat (BAY 1237592): targeting pulmonary vasculature via activating apo-sGC
by
Becker-Pelster, Eva M.
,
Pires, Philippe V.
,
Tinel, Hanna
in
Acetylcholine
,
Animals
,
Blood pressure
2022
Background
Oxidative stress associated with severe cardiopulmonary diseases leads to impairment in the nitric oxide/soluble guanylate cyclase signaling pathway, shifting native soluble guanylate cyclase toward heme-free apo-soluble guanylate cyclase. Here we describe a new inhaled soluble guanylate cyclase activator to target apo-soluble guanylate cyclase and outline its therapeutic potential.
Methods
We aimed to generate a novel soluble guanylate cyclase activator, specifically designed for local inhaled application in the lung. We report the discovery and in vitro and in vivo characterization of the soluble guanylate cyclase activator mosliciguat (BAY 1237592).
Results
Mosliciguat specifically activates apo-soluble guanylate cyclase leading to improved cardiopulmonary circulation. Lung-selective effects, e.g., reduced pulmonary artery pressure without reduced systemic artery pressure, were seen after inhaled but not after intravenous administration in a thromboxane-induced pulmonary hypertension minipig model. These effects were observed over a broad dose range with a long duration of action and were further enhanced under experimental oxidative stress conditions. In a unilateral broncho-occlusion minipig model, inhaled mosliciguat decreased pulmonary arterial pressure without ventilation/perfusion mismatch. With respect to airway resistance, mosliciguat showed additional beneficial bronchodilatory effects in an acetylcholine-induced rat model.
Conclusion
Inhaled mosliciguat may overcome treatment limitations in patients with pulmonary hypertension by improving pulmonary circulation and airway resistance without systemic exposure or ventilation/perfusion mismatch. Mosliciguat has the potential to become a new therapeutic paradigm, exhibiting a unique mode of action and route of application, and is currently under clinical development in phase Ib for pulmonary hypertension.
Journal Article
The sGC stimulator BAY-747 and activator runcaciguat can enhance memory in vivo via differential hippocampal plasticity mechanisms
by
Sandner, Peter
,
Van Goethem, Nick P.
,
Gerisch, Michael
in
631/378/1595
,
631/378/1689/132
,
631/378/2607
2022
Soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) requires a heme-group bound in order to produce cGMP, a second messenger involved in memory formation, while heme-free sGC is inactive. Two compound classes can increase sGC activity: sGC stimulators acting on heme-bound sGC, and sGC activators acting on heme-free sGC. In this rodent study, we investigated the potential of the novel brain-penetrant sGC stimulator BAY-747 and sGC activator runcaciguat to enhance long-term memory and attenuate short-term memory deficits induced by the NOS-inhibitor L-NAME. Furthermore, hippocampal plasticity mechanisms were investigated. In vivo, oral administration of BAY-747 and runcaciguat to male Wistar rats enhanced memory acquisition in the object location task (OLT), while only BAY-747 reversed L-NAME induced memory impairments in the OLT. Ex vivo, both BAY-747 and runcaciguat enhanced hippocampal GluA1-containing AMPA receptor (AMPAR) trafficking in a chemical LTP model for memory acquisition using acute mouse hippocampal slices. In vivo only runcaciguat acted on the glutamatergic AMPAR system in hippocampal memory acquisition processes, while for BAY-747 the effects on the neurotrophic system were more pronounced as measured in male mice using western blot. Altogether this study shows that sGC stimulators and activators have potential as cognition enhancers, while the underlying plasticity mechanisms may determine disease-specific effectiveness.
Journal Article
Stimulation of soluble guanylate cyclase reduces experimental dermal fibrosis
by
Akhmetshina, Alfiya
,
Sandner, Peter
,
Dees, Clara
in
Animals
,
Antibiotics, Antineoplastic - pharmacology
,
Biological and medical sciences
2012
Background Fibrosis and vascular disease are cardinal features of systemic sclerosis (SSc). Stimulators of soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC) are vasoactive drugs that are currently being evaluated in phase III clinical trials for pulmonary arterial hypertension. ObjectiveTo study the antifibrotic potency of sGC stimulators. Methods The effect of the sGC stimulator BAY 41-2272 on the release of collagen from dermal fibroblasts was examined. The antifibrotic effects of BAY 41-2272 on prevention and regression of fibrosis in bleomycin-induced dermal fibrosis and in Tsk-1 mice were also studied. Telemetric blood pressure studies in conscious mice were used to study potential hypotensive effects of sGC stimulation. Results sGC stimulation with BAY 41-2272 dose-dependently inhibited collagen release in dermal fibroblasts from patients with SSc and healthy individuals. Furthermore, BAY 41-2272 stopped the development of bleomycin-induced dermal fibrosis and skin fibrosis in Tsk-1 mice, preventing dermal and hypodermal thickening, reducing the numbers of myofibroblasts and reducing the hydroxyproline content. In addition, BAY 41-2272 was highly effective in the treatment of established fibrosis in the modified models of bleomycin-induced skin fibrosis and Tsk-1 mice. Treatment with sGC stimulators was well tolerated. Relevant antifibrotic doses of BAY 41-2272 did not affect systemic blood pressure and heart rate in mice. Conclusions These findings demonstrate potent antifibrotic effects and good tolerability of sGC stimulators in various experimental models of SSc. Given their potential vasoactive properties, sGC stimulators may be promising candidates for the dual treatment of fibrosis and vascular disease in SSc.
Journal Article
Nitric Oxide–Independent Soluble Guanylate Cyclase Activation Improves Vascular Function and Cardiac Remodeling in Sickle Cell Disease
by
Vanderpool, Rebecca R.
,
Mallampalli, Grace M.
,
Bullock, Grant C.
in
Acetylcholine
,
Anemia
,
Anemia, Sickle Cell - complications
2018
Sickle cell disease (SCD) is associated with intravascular hemolysis and oxidative inhibition of nitric oxide (NO) signaling. BAY 54-6544 is a small-molecule activator of oxidized soluble guanylate cyclase (sGC), which, unlike endogenous NO and the sGC stimulator, BAY 41-8543, preferentially binds and activates heme-free, NO-insensitive sGC to restore enzymatic cGMP production. We tested orally delivered sGC activator, BAY 54-6544 (17 mg/kg/d), sGC stimulator, BAY 41-8543, sildenafil, and placebo for 4–12 weeks in the Berkeley transgenic mouse model of SCD (BERK-SCD) and their hemizygous (Hemi) littermate controls (BERK-Hemi). Right ventricular (RV) maximum systolic pressure (RVmaxSP) was measured using micro right-heart catheterization. RV hypertrophy (RVH) was determined using Fulton’s index and RV corrected weight (ratio of RV to tibia). Pulmonary artery vasoreactivity was tested for endothelium-dependent and -independent vessel relaxation. Right-heart catheterization revealed higher RVmaxSP and RVH in BERK-SCD versus BERK-Hemi, which worsened with age. Treatment with the sGC activator more effectively lowered RVmaxSP and RVH, with 90-day treatment delivering superior results, when compared with other treatments and placebo groups. In myography experiments, acetylcholine-induced (endothelium-dependent) and sodium-nitroprusside–induced (endothelium-independent NO donor) relaxation of the pulmonary artery harvested from placebo-treated BERK-SCD was impaired relative to BERK-Hemi but improved after therapy with sGC activator. By contrast, no significant effect for sGC stimulator or sildenafil was observed in BERK-SCD. These findings suggest that sGC is oxidized in the pulmonary arteries of transgenic SCD mice, leading to blunted responses to NO, and that the sGC activator, BAY 54-6544, may represent a novel therapy for SCD-associated pulmonary arterial hypertension and cardiac remodeling.
Journal Article