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Mechanism of action of cariprazine

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2016

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Abstract

Cariprazine is a new therapeutic agent recently approved for the treatment of both schizophrenia and manic or mixed episodes associated with bipolar disorder, and is under investigation for the treatment of both bipolar depression and major depressive disorder.

Information

Type
Brainstorms
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press 2016 
Figure 0

Figure 1 Pharmacologic properties of cariprazine shown qualitatively as an icon above and quantitatively as a binding strip below. The binding strip is composed of a series of boxes for potency of binding of the drug at each individual neurotransmitter receptor indicated. Boxes are placed in rank order of how potently cariprazine binds to the receptors, with the most potent and largest boxes to the far left and the weakest binding and smallest boxes to the far right. The vertical line indicates binding at the D2 dopamine receptor, generally targeted for 60–80% occupancy in the treatment of schizophrenia. Thus, boxes to the left of this generally indicate greater degrees of occupancy at these receptors at therapeutic doses; boxes to the right generally indicate lower degrees of occupancy at these receptors at therapeutic doses. Except for the D3 receptor, almost all receptors have binding affinities lower than that for the D2 receptor for cariprazine.

Figure 1

Figure 2 The dopamine agonist spectrum goes from “silent” antagonism on the far left, which is pure antagonism without any agonist activity, to “full” agonism on the far right, which is the maximum amount of stimulation of the D2 receptor. Almost all antipsychotics are silent antagonists and lie to the far left on the spectrum. Dopamine itself is a full agonist and lies to the far right on the spectrum. Novel antipsychotics lie between these 2 extremes, but closer to the antagonist end of the spectrum. OPC 4392 and bifeprunox seem to have too much of a dopamine “kick,” more precisely, too much intrinsic activity, or too far to the right on the spectrum, and have failed as effective antipsychotics. Aripiprazole has a bit less intrinsic activity, yet its clinical profile of activation, agitation, and akathisia in some patients suggests that it has too much intrinsic activity for them. Both cariprazine and brexpiprazole “dialed down” the intrinsic activity another notch, to theoretically generate receptor binding properties at the D2 receptor that would make it less activating and possibly have a better overall tolerability profile compared to aripiprazole.

Figure 2

Figure 3 Comparing D3 dopamine receptor binding of cariprazine, brexpiprazole, and aripiprazole. The D2 receptor affinity for all compounds is highlighted by a vertical dotted line. The affinity of all 3 compounds for the D3 receptor is indicated, showing the very high affinity of cariprazine for the D3 receptor compared to the other antipsychotics. The affinity is so high for cariprazine that it is functionally higher than the affinity of the dopamine itself for the D3 receptor. This means that in the presence of dopamine in the living human brain, cariprazine is the only antipsychotic that blocks D3 receptors.

Figure 3

Figure 4 Comparing serotonergic 5HT1A and 5HT2A receptor binding of cariprazine, brexpiprazole, and aripiprazole. The D2 receptor affinity for all compounds is highlighted by a vertical dotted line. The 5HT1A and 5HT2A receptor binding affinities for these compounds are labeled in this figure. Cariprazine has relatively high 5HT1A receptor binding affinity and relatively low 5HT2A receptor binding affinity.

Figure 4

Figure 5 Comparing alpha 1B receptor binding of cariprazine, brexpiprazole, and aripiprazole. The D2 receptor affinity for all compounds is highlighted by a vertical dotted line. The alpha 1B receptor binding affinities for all compounds are labeled in this figure. The relative affinities of cariprazine and brexpiprazole for alpha 1B receptors is high, and for aripiprazole, lower.