Biochemical and pharmacological properties of a peripherally acting catechol-O-methyltransferase inhibitor entacapone

1992 
Entacapone, OR-611, was found to be a potent peripherally acting inhibitor of catechol-O-methyl-transferase (COMT). IC50 values of 10 nmol/1 and 160 nmol/1 were obtained for rat duodenum and liver-soluble COMT, respectively. There were no effects on other catecholamine metabolizing enzymes. Entacapone showed reversible, tight-binding type of inhibition of soluble rat liver COMT with a K; value of 14 nmol/1 and it also caused 50% inhibition of rat duodenal, erythrocyte, liver and striatal COMT activity 1 h after oral dosing with 1.1, 5.4, 6.7 and 24.2 mg/kg, respectively. However, penetration of entacapone into the brain was poor, since the formation of homovanillic acid (HVA), the O-methyl metabolite of dopamine in the striatum, was not reduced, even after the highest dose of 30 mg/kg.
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