| Literature DB >> 21645370 |
Geoffrey S Dow1, Erin Milner, Ian Bathurst, Jayendra Bhonsle, Diana Caridha, Sean Gardner, Lucia Gerena, Michael Kozar, Charlotte Lanteri, Anne Mannila, William McCalmont, Jay Moon, Kevin D Read, Suzanne Norval, Norma Roncal, David M Shackleford, Jason Sousa, Jessica Steuten, Karen L White, Qiang Zeng, Susan A Charman.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The clinical use of mefloquine (MQ) has declined due to dose-related neurological events. Next generation quinoline methanols (NGQMs) that do not accumulate in the central nervous system (CNS) to the same extent may have utility. In this study, CNS levels of NGQMs relative to MQ were measured and an early lead chemotype was identified for further optimization. EXPERIMENTALEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21645370 PMCID: PMC3128011 DOI: 10.1186/1475-2875-10-150
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Malar J ISSN: 1475-2875 Impact factor: 2.979
Ranges of physiochemical properties of quinoline methanols investigated in this study.
| Parameter | Range |
|---|---|
| MW | 324-475 |
| cLogD (PP) | 1.0-5.2 |
| cLogD (ACD) | -2.3-3.1 |
| PSA (Å2) | 36-104 |
| LogP | 0.4-3.7 |
| # FRBs | 3-11 |
| # HBDs | 1-5 |
| # HBAs | 3-7 |
Figure 1Structures of quinoline methanols investigated in this study. The structure of racemic mefloquine is indicated. Its two diasteromers were also investigated in this study.
Figure 2Maximum whole (A) and free (B) brain concentrations for racemic mefloquine, + . Compounds are color-coded green, yellow or red based on whether they exhibited the desired (> ten-fold lower than racemic mefloquine), acceptable (> five-fold lower than racemic mefloquine) or unacceptable brain levels, respectively.
Figure 3Relationships amongst four important pharmacological parameters for quinoline methanols were evaluated for evidence of correlations. A possible linear correlation between maximum and free brain concentration is evident on visual inspection of the data, and was confirmed mathematically (r2 = 0.89, P < 0.0001). There was no relationship evident between the other variables. Data are presented in a log format for ease of visualization. The correlation coefficient was calculated based on raw (not log transformed) data.
Figure 4Brain and plasma concentrations of racemic mefloquine and the diamine WR319581 after IV dosing (5 mg/kg) to male FVB mice.
Figure 5Structures, IC90s, maximum whole and free brain concentrations, and residual 24 h plasma concentrations of diamine quinoline methanols. IC90s are expressed in ng/ml against the mefloquine-sensitive W2 strain of P. falciparum. Maximum whole and free brain concentrations in male FVB mice after iv dosing (5 mg/kg) are expressed in ng/g. Residual plasma concentrations at 24 h after iv dosing are expressed as a percentage relative to the 5 minute time point. One in 5 diamines (20%, WR308396) had acceptable potency. One in 5 diamines had acceptable whole (20%, WR319535) and free (20%, WR319535) brain levels relative to mefloquine. WR319535 exhibited a half-life longer than mefloquine after oral dosing (data not shown). For this reason we have assumed that the residual plasma concentrations at 24 h of all (100%) of the diamines may be indicative of long half-lives.
Utility of MDCK permeability screen for ranking maximum brain concentrations of quinoline methanols relative to mefloquine.*
| Compounds with Papp < 7.4 × 10-6 cm/s | Compounds with Papp > 7.4 × 10-6 cm/s | |
|---|---|---|
| Compounds with lower maximum brain concentrations than mefloquine | 10 | 4 |
| Compounds with higher maximum brain concentrations than mefloquine | 0 | 10 |
* Racemic mefloquine and isomers excluded