BML-190
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Formula | C23H23ClN2O4 |
Molar mass | 426.90 g·mol−1 |
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BML-190 (Indomethacin morpholinylamide) is a drug used in scientific research that acts as a selective CB2 inverse agonist.[1] BML-190 is structurally derived from the NSAID indomethacin but has a quite different biological activity.[2] The activity produced by this compound is disputed, with some sources referring to it as a CB2 agonist rather than an inverse agonist;[3][4] this may reflect an error in classification, or alternatively it may produce different effects in different tissues, and more research is required to resolve this dispute.
References
[edit]- ^ New DC, Wong YH (February 2003). "BML-190 and AM251 act as inverse agonists at the human cannabinoid CB2 receptor: signalling via cAMP and inositol phosphates". FEBS Letters. 536 (1–3): 157–60. doi:10.1016/S0014-5793(03)00048-6. PMID 12586356. S2CID 38569901.
- ^ Klegeris A, Bissonnette CJ, McGeer PL (June 2003). "Reduction of human monocytic cell neurotoxicity and cytokine secretion by ligands of the cannabinoid-type CB2 receptor". British Journal of Pharmacology. 139 (4): 775–86. doi:10.1038/sj.bjp.0705304. PMC 1573900. PMID 12813001.
- ^ Melck D, De Petrocellis L, Orlando P, Bisogno T, Laezza C, Bifulco M, Di Marzo V (January 2000). "Suppression of nerve growth factor Trk receptors and prolactin receptors by endocannabinoids leads to inhibition of human breast and prostate cancer cell proliferation". Endocrinology. 141 (1): 118–26. doi:10.1210/endo.141.1.7239. PMID 10614630.
- ^ Scutt A, Williamson EM (January 2007). "Cannabinoids stimulate fibroblastic colony formation by bone marrow cells indirectly via CB2 receptors". Calcified Tissue International. 80 (1): 50–9. doi:10.1007/s00223-006-0171-7. PMID 17205329. S2CID 23624771.