| Literature DB >> 27144831 |
Wei-Sheng Huang1, Shuangying Liu1, Dong Zou1, Mathew Thomas1, Yihan Wang1, Tianjun Zhou1, Jan Romero1, Anna Kohlmann1, Feng Li1, Jiwei Qi1, Lisi Cai1, Timothy A Dwight1, Yongjin Xu1, Rongsong Xu1, Rory Dodd1, Angela Toms1, Lois Parillon1, Xiaohui Lu1, Rana Anjum1, Sen Zhang1, Frank Wang1, Jeffrey Keats1, Scott D Wardwell1, Yaoyu Ning1, Qihong Xu1, Lauren E Moran1, Qurish K Mohemmad1, Hyun Gyung Jang1, Tim Clackson1, Narayana I Narasimhan1, Victor M Rivera1, Xiaotian Zhu1, David Dalgarno1, William C Shakespeare1.
Abstract
In the treatment of echinoderm microtubule-associated protein-like 4 (EML4)-anaplastic lymphoma kinase positive (ALK+) non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC), secondary mutations within the ALK kinase domain have emerged as a major resistance mechanism to both first- and second-generation ALK inhibitors. This report describes the design and synthesis of a series of 2,4-diarylaminopyrimidine-based potent and selective ALK inhibitors culminating in identification of the investigational clinical candidate brigatinib. A unique structural feature of brigatinib is a phosphine oxide, an overlooked but novel hydrogen-bond acceptor that drives potency and selectivity in addition to favorable ADME properties. Brigatinib displayed low nanomolar IC50s against native ALK and all tested clinically relevant ALK mutants in both enzyme-based biochemical and cell-based viability assays and demonstrated efficacy in multiple ALK+ xenografts in mice, including Karpas-299 (anaplastic large-cell lymphomas [ALCL]) and H3122 (NSCLC). Brigatinib represents the most clinically advanced phosphine oxide-containing drug candidate to date and is currently being evaluated in a global phase 2 registration trial.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27144831 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.6b00306
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446