| Literature DB >> 22924734 |
J Jean Cui1, Michele McTigue, Mitchell Nambu, Michelle Tran-Dubé, Mason Pairish, Hong Shen, Lei Jia, Hengmiao Cheng, Jacqui Hoffman, Phuong Le, Mehran Jalaie, Gilles H Goetz, Kevin Ryan, Neil Grodsky, Ya-li Deng, Max Parker, Sergei Timofeevski, Brion W Murray, Shinji Yamazaki, Shirley Aguirre, Qiuhua Li, Helen Zou, James Christensen.
Abstract
The c-MET receptor tyrosine kinase is an attractive oncology target because of its critical role in human oncogenesis and tumor progression. An oxindole hydrazide hit 6 was identified during a c-MET HTS campaign and subsequently demonstrated to have an unusual degree of selectivity against a broad array of other kinases. The cocrystal structure of the related oxindole hydrazide c-MET inhibitor 10 with a nonphosphorylated c-MET kinase domain revealed a unique binding mode associated with the exquisite selectivity profile. The chemically labile oxindole hydrazide scaffold was replaced with a chemically and metabolically stable triazolopyrazine scaffold using structure based drug design. Medicinal chemistry lead optimization produced 2-(4-(1-(quinolin-6-ylmethyl)-1H-[1,2,3]triazolo[4,5-b]pyrazin-6-yl)-1H-pyrazol-1-yl)ethanol (2, PF-04217903), an extremely potent and exquisitely selective c-MET inhibitor. 2 demonstrated effective tumor growth inhibition in c-MET dependent tumor models with good oral PK properties and an acceptable safety profile in preclinical studies. 2 progressed to clinical evaluation in a Phase I oncology setting.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22924734 DOI: 10.1021/jm300967g
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446