| Literature DB >> 24900409 |
Xianhai Huang1, Wei Zhou1, Xiaoxiang Liu1, Hongmei Li1, George Sun1, Mihirbaran Mandal1, Monica Vicarel1, Xiaohong Zhu1, Chad Bennett1, Troy McCraken1, Dmitri Pissarnitski1, Zhiqiang Zhao1, David Cole1, Gioconda Gallo1, Zhaoning Zhu1, Anandan Palani1, Robert Aslanian1, John Clader1, Michael Czarniecki1, William Greenlee1, Duane Burnett1, Mary Cohen-Williams1, Lynn Hyde1, Lixin Song1, Lili Zhang1, Inhou Chu1, Alexei Buevich1.
Abstract
Fused oxadiazines (3) were discovered as selective and orally bioavailable γ-secretase modulators (GSMs) based on the structural framework of oxadiazoline GSMs. Although structurally related, initial modifications showed that structure-activity relationships (SARs) did not translate from the oxadiazoline to the oxadiazine series. Subsequent SAR studies on modifications at the C3 and C4 positions of the fused oxadiazine core helped to identify GSMs such as compounds 8r and 8s that were highly efficacious in vitro and in vivo in a number of animal models with highly desirable physical and pharmacological properties. Further improvements of in vitro activity and selectivity were achieved by the preparation of fused morpholine oxadiazines. The shift in specificity of APP cleavage rather than a reduction in overall γ-secretase activity and the lack of changes in substrate accumulation and Notch processing as observed in the animal studies of compound 8s confirm that the oxadiazine series of compounds are potent GSMs.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer's disease; Notch processing; amyloid precursor protein; morpholine; oxadiazine; γ-secreatase modulator
Year: 2012 PMID: 24900409 PMCID: PMC4025817 DOI: 10.1021/ml300209g
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Med Chem Lett ISSN: 1948-5875 Impact factor: 4.345