| Literature DB >> 16250645 |
Robert W Marquis1, Ian James, Jin Zeng, Robert E Lee Trout, Scott Thompson, Attiq Rahman, Dennis S Yamashita, Ren Xie, Yu Ru, Catherine J Gress, Simon Blake, Michael A Lark, Shing-Mei Hwang, Thaddeus Tomaszek, Priscilla Offen, Martha S Head, Maxwell D Cummings, Daniel F Veber.
Abstract
The extension of a previously reported cathepsin K azepanone-based inhibitor template to the design and synthesis of potent and selective inhibitors of the homologous cysteine protease cathepsin L is detailed. Structure-activity studies examining the effect of inhibitor selectivity as a function of the P3 and P2 binding elements of the potent cathepsin K inhibitor 1 revealed that incorporation of either a P3 quinoline-8-carboxamide or a naphthylene-1-carboxamide led to increased selectivity for cathepsin L over cathepsin K. Substitution of the P2 leucine of 1 with either a phenylalanine or a beta-naphthylalanine also resulted in an increased selectivity for cathepsin L over cathepsin K. Molecular modeling studies with the inhibitors docked within the active sites of both cathepsins L and K have rationalized the observed selectivities. Optimization of cathepsin L binding by the combination of the P3 naphthylene-1-carboxamide with the P2 beta-naphthylalanine provided 15, which is a potent, selective, and competitive inhibitor of human cathepsin L with a K(i) = 0.43 nM.Entities:
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Year: 2005 PMID: 16250645 DOI: 10.1021/jm0502079
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446