| Literature DB >> 20684549 |
Victor J Cee1, Laurie B Schenkel, Brian L Hodous, Holly L Deak, Hanh N Nguyen, Philip R Olivieri, Karina Romero, Annette Bak, Xuhai Be, Steve Bellon, Tammy L Bush, Alan C Cheng, Grace Chung, Steve Coats, Patrick M Eden, Kelly Hanestad, Paul L Gallant, Yan Gu, Xin Huang, Richard L Kendall, Min-Hwa Jasmine Lin, Michael J Morrison, Vinod F Patel, Robert Radinsky, Paul E Rose, Sandra Ross, Ji-Rong Sun, Jin Tang, Huilin Zhao, Marc Payton, Stephanie D Geuns-Meyer.
Abstract
The discovery of aurora kinases as essential regulators of cell division has led to intense interest in identifying small molecule aurora kinase inhibitors for the potential treatment of cancer. A high-throughput screening effort identified pyridinyl-pyrimidine 6a as a moderately potent dual inhibitor of aurora kinases -A and -B. Optimization of this hit resulted in an anthranilamide lead (6j) that possessed improved enzyme and cellular activity and exhibited a high level of kinase selectivity. However, this anthranilamide and subsequent analogues suffered from a lack of oral bioavailability. Converting the internally hydrogen-bonded six-membered pseudo-ring of the anthranilamide to a phthalazine (8a-b) led to a dramatic improvement in oral bioavailability (38-61%F) while maintaining the potency and selectivity characteristics of the anthranilamide series. In a COLO 205 tumor pharmacodynamic assay measuring phosphorylation of the aurora-B substrate histone H3 at serine 10 (p-histone H3), oral administration of 8b at 50 mg/kg demonstrated significant reduction in tumor p-histone H3 for at least 6 h.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20684549 DOI: 10.1021/jm100394y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446