Article
Author: Cheng, Dong ; Ma, Zhengping ; Lawrence, R Michael ; Tirucherai, Giridhar S ; De Oliveira, Claudia H ; Luo, Yi ; Azzara, Anthony V ; Ammar, Ron ; Charles, Edgar D ; Zinker, Bradley A ; Boehm, Stephanie L ; Lentz, Kimberley A ; Smith, Julia ; Devasthale, Pratik ; Kopcho, Lisa M ; Krishna, Gopal ; Shipkova, Petia ; Gu, Huidong ; Stryker, Steven A ; Chu, Ching-Hsuen ; Dierks, Elizabeth A ; Gordon, David A ; Brown, Elizabeth A ; Onorato, Joelle M ; Carayannopoulos, Leon
Monoacylglycerol acyltransferase 2 (MGAT2) is an important enzyme highly expressed in the human small intestine and liver for the regulation of triglyceride absorption and homeostasis. We report that treatment with BMS-963272, a potent and selective MGAT2 inhibitor, decreased inflammation and fibrosis in CDAHFD and STAM, two murine nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH) models. In high-fat-diet-treated cynomolgus monkeys, in contrast to a selective diacylglycerol acyltransferase 1 (DGAT1) inhibitor, BMS-963272 did not cause diarrhea. In a Phase 1 multiple-dose trial of healthy human adults with obesity (NCT04116632), BMS-963272 was safe and well tolerated with no treatment discontinuations due to adverse events. Consistent with the findings in rodent models, BMS-963272 elevated plasma long-chain dicarboxylic acid, indicating robust pharmacodynamic biomarker modulation; increased gut hormones GLP-1 and PYY; and decreased body weight in human subjects. These data suggest MGAT2 inhibition is a promising therapeutic opportunity for NASH, a disease with high unmet medical needs.