| Literature DB >> 30978966 |
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: binding affinity; carbohydrate; drug development; glycomimetic; lead optimization; lectin
Year: 2019 PMID: 30978966 PMCID: PMC6631974 DOI: 10.3390/ph12020055
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pharmaceuticals (Basel) ISSN: 1424-8247
Figure 1Structural variation in glycans arises from differences in: (a) anomeric stereochemistry; (b) regiochemistry of linkages; (c) ring size; and (d) further covalent modifications.
Figure 2Examples of glycomimetic inhibitors that have successfully reached the market.
Figure 3The bioisosteric replacement of hydroxy substituents with one or more fluorine atoms has proven successful in generating glycomimetics [46,48].
Examples of bioisosteric groups.
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Figure 4A Neu5Ac-based glycomimetic 10 was successful in preventing tumor metastasis in a mouse model [50].
Figure 5Biaryl mannosides have been successfully developed as nanomolar antagonists of the bacterial protein FimH [56,60].
Figure 6Biaryl glycosides have also been developed as antagonists of the adhesin FmlH; co-treatment with FmlH and FimH antagonists in a mouse model of urinary tract infection significantly facilitated bacterial clearance [31].
Figure 7Iminosugars have been used as pharmacological chaperones, in efforts to treat lysosomal storage diseases [63,66].
Figure 8Inhibitors of Siglec-7 which target additional protein interactions through modification at C-2 and C-9 positions (rIP = relative inhibitory potency) [67,68].
Figure 9High-affinity inhibitors of Siglec-2 generated through C-2, C-4, and C-9 modification of sialic acid [70].
Figure 10The first reported covalent lectin inhibitor, targeting Pseudomonas aeruginosa LecA [74].
Figure 11n-Heptyl pyranose and septanose FimH ligands have been used to study the effects of pre-organization on binding thermodynamics [86].
Figure 12Multivalent constructs based on a DC-SIGN glycomimetic antagonist, used to probe the effects of chelation versus statistical rebinding multivalency effects [93].
Figure 13Examples of different O-glycoside mimetics which have been obtained synthetically, with the general aim of reducing hydrolytic degradation rates in vivo.
Figure 14The development of C-glycosides for treatment of UTIs has been used to improve the metabolic stability of biaryl FimH antagonists (HAI = hemagglutination inhibition assay) [115].
Figure 15A comparison of O-, N-, S-, and C-glycosides as FimH antagonists for therapy in Crohn’s disease [116,117,119].
Figure 16Prodrugs can be used to improve oral bioavailability, by improving factors such as intestinal epithelial membrane permeability (1, ester prodrug) or solubility (50, phosphate prodrug) [125,126].
Figure 17Bioisosteric replacement of a carboxylate moiety was used to optimize FimH antagonist 51 which suffered from rapid renal clearance and low tubular reabsorption in vivo [128].