| Literature DB >> 30108829 |
Jonathan D Low1, Michael D Bartberger2, Kui Chen3, Yuan Cheng1, Mark R Fielden4, Vijay Gore1, Dean Hickman5, Qingyian Liu1, E Allen Sickmier6, Hugo M Vargas4, Jonathan Werner4, Ryan D White7, Douglas A Whittington6, Stephen Wood8, Ana E Minatti1.
Abstract
As part of an ongoing effort at Amgen to develop a disease-modifying therapy for Alzheimer's disease, we have previously used the aminooxazoline xanthene (AOX) scaffold to generate potent and orally efficacious BACE1 inhibitors. While AOX-BACE1 inhibitors demonstrated acceptable cardiovascular safety margins, a retinal pathological finding in rat toxicological studies demanded further investigation. It has been widely postulated that such retinal toxicity might be related to off-target inhibition of Cathepsin D (CatD), a closely related aspartyl protease. We report the development of AOX-BACE1 inhibitors with improved selectivity against CatD by following a structure- and property-based approach. Our efforts culminated in the discovery of a picolinamide-substituted 3-aza-AOX-BACE1 inhibitor absent of retinal effects in an early screening rat toxicology study.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 30108829 PMCID: PMC6072065 DOI: 10.1039/c7md00106a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medchemcomm ISSN: 2040-2503 Impact factor: 3.597