Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters
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Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. · May 2013
Discovery and synthesis of novel 4-aminopyrrolopyrimidine Tie-2 kinase inhibitors for the treatment of solid tumors.
The synthesis and biological evaluation of novel Tie-2 kinase inhibitors are presented. Based on the pyrrolopyrimidine chemotype, several new series are described, including the benzimidazole series by linking a benzimidazole to the C5-position of the 4-amino-pyrrolopyrimidine core and the ketophenyl series synthesized by incorporating a ketophenyl group to the C5-position. Medicinal chemistry efforts led to potent Tie-2 inhibitors. Compound 15, a ketophenyl pyrrolopyrimidine urea analog with improved physicochemical properties, demonstrated favorable in vitro attributes as well as dose responsive and robust oral tumor growth inhibition in animal models.
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Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. · May 2013
Identification of new peptide amides as selective cathepsin L inhibitors: the first step towards selective irreversible inhibitors?
A small library of peptide amides was designed to profile the cathepsin L active site. Within the cathepsin family of cysteine proteases, the first round of selection was on cathepsin L and cathepsin B, and then selected hits were further evaluated for binding to cathepsin K and cathepsin S. ⋯ An acyloxymethyl ketone warhead was then attached to these sequences. Although these original irreversible inhibitors inactivate cathepsin L, it appears that the nature of the warhead drastically impact the selectivity profile of the resulting covalent inhibitors.
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The GPR40 (FFA1) has emerged as an attractive target for a novel insulin secretagogue with glucose dependency. A series of novel orally bioavailable GPR40 agonists was discovered. SAR study and structural optimization led to identification of compounds 28a and 30a as potent GPR40 agonists with superior physiochemical properties and robust in vivo efficacy in rhesus monkeys.
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Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. · May 2013
Small-molecule inhibitors of cathepsin L incorporating functionalized ring-fused molecular frameworks.
Cathepsin L is a cysteine protease that is upregulated in a variety of malignant tumors and plays a significant role in cancer cell invasion and migration. It is an attractive target for the development of small-molecule inhibitors, which may prove beneficial as treatment agents to limit or arrest cancer metastasis. We have previously identified a structurally diverse series of thiosemicarbazone-based inhibitors that incorporate the benzophenone and thiochromanone molecular scaffolds. ⋯ In addition, analogues that contain oxygen (chromanone-based), sulfur (thiochroman-based), sulfoxide, and sulfone functionalization have been prepared in order to further investigate the structure-activity relationship aspects associated with these compounds and their ability to inhibit cathepsins L and B. From this small-library of 30 compounds, five were found to be strongly inhibitory (IC50 <500 nM) against cathepsin L with the most active compound (7-bromodihydroquinoline thiosemicarbazone 48) demonstrating an IC50=164 nM. All of the compounds evaluated were inactive (IC50 >10,000 nM) as inhibitors of cathepsin B, thus establishing a high degree (>20-fold) of selectivity (cathepsin L vs. cathepsin B) for the most active cathepsin L inhibitors in this series.
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Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. · Feb 2013
Synthesis and biological evaluation of substituted 2-benzoylpyridine thiosemicarbazones: novel structure-activity relationships underpinning their anti-proliferative and chelation efficacy.
The 2-benzoylpyridine thiosemicarbazone (BpT) chelators demonstrate potent anti-proliferative effects against tumor cells. To understand their structure-activity relationships, BpT analogues incorporating electron-donating substituents on the pyridine and phenyl rings of the BpT scaffold were designed and represent the first attempts to modify the pyridine ring of these thiosemicarbazones. ⋯ Structure-activity analysis revealed that mono- or di-methoxy substitution at the phenyl ring resulted in lower anti-proliferative activity, while methoxy substitutions at the phenyl ring enhanced iron chelation efficacy. These important findings facilitate the design of thiosemicarbazones with greater anti-tumor activity.