Literature DB >> 11311061

Azepanone-based inhibitors of human and rat cathepsin K.

R W Marquis1, Y Ru, S M LoCastro, J Zeng, D S Yamashita, H J Oh, K F Erhard, L D Davis, T A Tomaszek, D Tew, K Salyers, J Proksch, K Ward, B Smith, M Levy, M D Cummings, R C Haltiwanger, G Trescher, B Wang, M E Hemling, C J Quinn, H Y Cheng, F Lin, W W Smith, C A Janson, B Zhao, M S McQueney, K D'Alessio, C P Lee, A Marzulli, R A Dodds, S Blake, S M Hwang, I E James, C J Gress, B R Bradley, M W Lark, M Gowen, D F Veber.   

Abstract

The synthesis, in vitro activities, and pharmacokinetics of a series of azepanone-based inhibitors of the cysteine protease cathepsin K (EC 3.4.22.38) are described. These compounds show improved configurational stability of the C-4 diastereomeric center relative to the previously published five- and six-membered ring ketone-based inhibitor series. Studies in this series have led to the identification of 20, a potent, selective inhibitor of human cathepsin K (K(i) = 0.16 nM) as well as 24, a potent inhibitor of both human (K(i) = 0.0048 nM) and rat (K(i,app) = 4.8 nM) cathepsin K. Small-molecule X-ray crystallographic analysis of 20 established the C-4 S stereochemistry as being critical for potent inhibition and that unbound 20 adopted the expected equatorial conformation for the C-4 substituent. Molecular modeling studies predicted the higher energy axial orientation at C-4 of 20 when bound within the active site of cathepsin K, a feature subsequently confirmed by X-ray crystallography. Pharmacokinetic studies in the rat show 20 to be 42% orally bioavailable. Comparison of the transport of the cyclic and acyclic analogues through CaCo-2 cells suggests that oral bioavailability of the acyclic derivatives is limited by a P-glycoprotein-mediated efflux mechanism. It is concluded that the introduction of a conformational constraint has served the dual purpose of increasing inhibitor potency by locking in a bioactive conformation as well as locking out available conformations which may serve as substrates for enzyme systems that limit oral bioavailability.

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Year:  2001        PMID: 11311061     DOI: 10.1021/jm000481x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Med Chem        ISSN: 0022-2623            Impact factor:   7.446


  10 in total

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  10 in total

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