For research use only. Not for therapeutic Use.
PD 117519 (CI947) is an A2A adenosine agonist which has shown oral antihypertensive activity in pharmacological animal models[1][2].
PD 117519 (2-10 mg/kg; oral administration; 16-24 hours; male beagle dogs) treatment produces significant hemodynamic changes at Tmax (4 hours) follows by acute coronary vascular injury that is evident at 16 hours postdosing.Treatment with 2 or 10 mg/kg of PD 117519 produces significant increases in mean heart rate and decreases in mean indirectsystolic blood pressure at time of highest drug exposure, 4 hours postdosing[3].
Catalog Number | I005700 |
CAS Number | 96392-15-3 |
Synonyms | (2R,3R,4S,5R)-2-[6-[[(1R)-2,3-dihydro-1H-inden-1-yl]amino]purin-9-yl]-5-(hydroxymethyl)oxolane-3,4-diol |
Molecular Formula | C19H21N5O4 |
Purity | ≥95% |
InChI | InChI=1S/C19H21N5O4/c25-7-13-15(26)16(27)19(28-13)24-9-22-14-17(20-8-21-18(14)24)23-12-6-5-10-3-1-2-4-11(10)12/h1-4,8-9,12-13,15-16,19,25-27H,5-7H2,(H,20,21,23)/t12-,13-,15-,16-,19-/m1/s1 |
InChIKey | FSKMJUWPFLDDRS-BYMDKACISA-N |
SMILES | C1CC2=CC=CC=C2C1NC3=C4C(=NC=N3)N(C=N4)C5C(C(C(O5)CO)O)O |
Reference | [1]. Reynolds DL, et al. Liquid chromatographic analysis of the adenosine agonist PD 117519 in dog plasma. J Pharm Biomed Anal. 1991;9(4):345-9. [2]. Tobin GA, et al. The role of eNOS phosphorylation in causing drug-induced vascular injury. Toxicol Pathol. 2014 Jun;42(4):709-24. [3]. Enerson BE, et al. Acute drug-induced vascular injury in beagle dogs: pathology and correlating genomic expression. Toxicol Pathol. 2006;34(1):27-32. |