The main goal of the identification of the first aldosterone antagonists, which happened during the 1950s, was to identify inhibitors of
aldosterone activity. In those times, the main use of
aldosterone was recognized as the control of renal
sodium and the excretion of
potassium.
Hans Selye, a Hungarian-Canadian endocrinologist, studied the effects of
aldosterone antagonists on rats and found that the use of one of the first aldosterone antagonists,
spironolactone, protected them from aldosterone-induced cardiac
necrosis. The same year, 1959,
spironolactone was launched as a
potassium-sparing diuretic. It became clear years later that
aldosterone antagonists inhibit a specific
receptor protein. This protein has high affinity for
aldosterone but also for
cortisol in humans and
corticosterone in
mice and
rats. For this reason, aldosterone antagonists were called mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists. There have been three major waves in the
pharmaceutical industry when it comes to
research and development of mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists: The first wave took place within
Searle Laboratories. This company identified, shortly after the purification of
aldosterone,
steroid-based
spironolactone as the first anti-mineralocorticoid. The second wave was all about discovering much more specific
steroidal anti-mineralocorticoids. The main active companies were
Searle,
Ciba-Geigy,
Roussel Uclaf and
Schering AG. Around 50 years after
Selye's work, several pharmaceutical companies began
drug discovery programs. Their goal was to discover novel
non-steroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists for use as
efficacious and safe drugs with the
pharmacodynamics and
pharmacokinetics well defined. Their goal was to use these candidates for a broad spectrum of diseases. This was essentially the third wave. The first mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists were all discovered and identified by
in vivo experiments whereas the identification of novel
non-steroidal mineralocorticoid receptor antagonists were done with
high-throughput screening of millions of
chemical compounds in various pharmaceutical companies. ==Examples==