| Bioactivity | Piribedil dihydrochloride is a potent and orally active dopamine D2 and dopamine D3 agonist. Piribedil dihydrochloride is also a α2-adrenoceptors antagonist. Piribedil dihydrochloride can inhibit MLL1 methyltransferase activity (EC50: 0.18 μM). Piribedil dihydrochloride has the potential for the research of parkinson's disease, circulatory disorders, cancers[1][2][3][4]. |
| Invitro | Piribedil dihydrochloride (0-160 μM, 7 days) specifically inhibits MLL1 methyltransferase activity and selectively suppresses MLL-r cell proliferation[4].Piribedil dihydrochloride (0-160 μM, 4 days) selectively decreases the H3K4 methylation in MLL-r cells (THP-1 and MV4;11), by disturbing the MLL1-WDR5 interaction[4].Piribedil dihydrochloride (0-160 μM, 4 days) induces cell-cycle arrest, apoptosis and differentiation in MLL-r cells (THP-1 and MV4;11)[4]. Cell Viability Assay[4] Cell Line: |
| In Vivo | Piribedil dihydrochloride (intraperitoneal injection, 5, 15, 40 mg/kg ) alleviates the L-DOPA-induced dyskinesias in a rat model of Parkinson’s disease[2].Piribedil dihydrochloride (oral gavage, 4-5 mg/kg, daily for 2 weeks) increases locomotor activity and reversal of motor deficits in adult common marmosets[3].Piribedil dihydrochloride (oral gavage, 150 mg/kg, daily for 21 days) inhibits MLL-r tumor growth and decreases the expression of MLL1 target genes in MV4;11 tumor xenografts[4]. Animal Model: |
| Name | Piribedil dihydrochloride |
| CAS | 1451048-94-4 |
| Formula | C16H20Cl2N4O2 |
| Molar Mass | 371.26 |
| Transport | Room temperature in continental US; may vary elsewhere. |
| Storage | Please store the product under the recommended conditions in the Certificate of Analysis. |
| Reference | [1]. Sweet RD, et al. Piribedil, a dopamine agonist, in Parkinson's disease. Clin Pharmacol Ther. 1974 Dec;16(6):1077-82. [2]. Gerlach M, et al. The effect of piribedil on L-DOPA-induced dyskinesias in a rat model of Parkinson's disease: differential role of α(2) adrenergic mechanisms. J Neural Transm (Vienna). 2013 Jan;120(1):31-6. [3]. Smith LA, Tet al. Repeated administration of piribedil induces less dyskinesia than L-dopa in MPTP-treated common marmosets: a behavioural and biochemical investigation. Mov Disord. 2002 Sep;17(5):887-901. [4]. Xiong Zhang, et al. Piribedil disrupts the MLL1-WDR5 interaction and sensitizes MLL-rearranged acute myeloid leukemia (AML) to doxorubicin-induced apoptosis. Cancer Lett. 2018 Sep 1;431:150-160. |