Roxindole
Dopaminergic & serotonergic drug developed for schizophrenia treatment
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Roxindole (developmental code name EMD-49980) is a dopaminergic and serotonergic drug which was originally developed by Merck KGaA for the treatment of schizophrenia.[1][2][3] In clinical trials its antipsychotic efficacy was only modest but it was unexpectedly found to produce potent and rapid antidepressant and anxiolytic effects.[2][3] As a result, roxindole was further researched for the treatment of depression instead.[1][4] It has also been investigated as a therapy for Parkinson's disease and prolactinoma.[5][6] However, it has never been marketed.[7]
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| Other names | EMD-49980; EMD49980 |
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| Formula | C23H26N2O |
| Molar mass | 346.474 g·mol−1 |
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Roxindole acts as an agonist at the following receptors:[8][9]
- D2 receptor (Ki = 2.82 nM)
- D3 receptor (Ki = 1.17 nM)
- D4 receptor (Ki = 5.89 nM)
- 5-HT1A receptor (Ki = 0.380 nM)
At D2 and possibly D3 receptors roxindole is a partial agonist with preferential actions at autoreceptors and has been touted as a 'selective' autoreceptor agonist, hence the justification of its application as an antipsychotic.[10][11] Weaker activity at the serotonin 1B and 1D receptors has been seen.[12] It is also a serotonin reuptake inhibitor (IC50 = 1.4 nM) and has been reported to act as a 5-HT2A receptor antagonist as well.[9][10][11][13]