| Literature DB >> 24182233 |
Bruce A Ellsworth1, Philip M Sher, Ximao Wu, Gang Wu, Richard B Sulsky, Zhengxiang Gu, Natesan Murugesan, Yeheng Zhu, Guixue Yu, Doree F Sitkoff, Kenneth E Carlson, Liya Kang, Yifan Yang, Ning Lee, Rose A Baska, William J Keim, Mary Jane Cullen, Anthony V Azzara, Eva Zuvich, Michael A Thomas, Kenneth W Rohrbach, James J Devenny, Helen E Godonis, Susan J Harvey, Brian J Murphy, Gerry G Everlof, Paul I Stetsko, Olafur Gudmundsson, Susan Johnghar, Asoka Ranasinghe, Kamelia Behnia, Mary Ann Pelleymounter, William R Ewing.
Abstract
Several strategies have been employed to reduce the long in vivo half-life of our lead CB1 antagonist, triazolopyridazinone 3, to differentiate the pharmacokinetic profile versus the lead clinical compounds. An in vitro and in vivo clearance data set revealed a lack of correlation; however, when compounds with <5% free fraction were excluded, a more predictable correlation was observed. Compounds with log P between 3 and 4 were likely to have significant free fraction, so we designed compounds in this range to give more predictable clearance values. This strategy produced compounds with desirable in vivo half-lives, ultimately leading to the discovery of compound 46. The progression of compound 46 was halted due to the contemporaneous marketing and clinical withdrawal of other centrally acting CB1 antagonists; however, the design strategy successfully delivered a potent CB1 antagonist with the desired pharmacokinetic properties and a clean off-target profile.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24182233 DOI: 10.1021/jm4010835
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446