Fitness Info, News, Pictures, Forum, Shop, Travel and Community
 Members 
 
 

FITNESS NEWS ITEM

Improvement in Niacin Seen


WEDNESDAY, 28 MARCH 2007


CHICAGO — New discoveries offer promise for developing drugs that improve on the therapeutic profile of niacin, the inexpensive, time-tested B-vitamin that boosts levels of HDL cholesterol — the "good" cholesterol with the potential to protect people against heart attacks and stroke, scientists reported today.

Graeme Semple, Ph.D., Vice President of Discovery Chemistry at Arena Pharmaceuticals, San Diego, Calif., described new insights into developing drugs that raise HDL via the same mechanism as niacin in a report scheduled for presentation at the 233rd national meeting of the American Chemical Society, being held here this week.

In small doses, niacin is the familiar B-complex vitamin, which helps the body metabolize or breakdown carbohydrates, fats and protein into compounds that the body needs to maintain good health. In the high doses prescribed by a physician, niacin can increase HDL by as much as 35 percent and reduce levels of artery-clogging triglycerides by 50 percent.

Doctors have known since the 1970s that niacin can reduce the risk of heart attacks and strokes, but it has not been prescribed as widely as newer and more costly medications known as statins.

"The use of niacin is limited by its side-effects, including a highly uncomfortable skin flushing, which contributes significantly to poor patient compliance," Semple explained. "Since currently marketed cholesterol drugs have a more modest HDL-raising activity than niacin, better tolerated HDL-targeted therapies with improved efficacy could provide additional clinical benefits to patients and potentially reduce the risk of heart attack and stroke."

Semple described research toward that goal, including Arena"s discovery of a niacin receptor termed GPR109a. It is among a family of so-called G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs) that have long been considered among scientists as good targets for the development of new drugs.

Molecules termed ligands from the environment outside cells bind with these receptors, which are located on the cell surface. Ligands activate the GPCRs, signaling biochemical machinery inside the cell to either inhibit or accelerate cellular processes.

Niacin activates GPCRs on fat cells, signaling the cells to stop producing fatty acids in a way believed to raise HDL levels. It also can activate GPR109b, a closely related receptor on immune system cells. Semple believes that activation of one or both of those receptors may be responsible for niacin"s beneficial effects, and the undesirable side effects.

Semple said data from the joint Arena-Merck research program reinforces the hypothesis that it may be possible to identify a compound that activates the niacin receptor without causing flushing, thereby separating the beneficial effects on fatty acids from the flushing side effect.

"This work has not been reported previously and has been carried out within the last three years," Semple noted. "In addition, no other pharmaceutical companies have reported on new compounds for these targets in the open literature, although some patents have appeared."

advertisementadvertising info
Print Version of this News Item Print News Item Email this News Item Email News Item Comment on this News Item Comment on News Item Submit a News Item Submit News Item Search our Fitness News Item Search News Items
 
 
 GLOBAL FITNESS SEARCH
Entire Site | Info | News | Pictures | Forum | Shop
 FITNESS GIFT IDEAS
Check out these Fitness Gift Ideas!
JOIN OUR NEWSLETTER
Stay up-to-date with all fitness News by becoming a member and joining our fitness Community.
SUBMIT NEWS ITEM
If you know any Fitness Events or News that you would like to share with the world, then we invite you to Submit a News Item.
Back to Top


© 2003-2009 ABC of Fitness, part of MaxLifestyle International Inc. All rights reserved.