| Literature DB >> 33775835 |
Misong Kim1, Geuntae Kim1, Minji Kang1, Dohyeong Ko1, Yunchan Nam1, Chang Sang Moon1, Heung Mo Kang1, Ji-Sun Shin2, Oliver Werz3, Kyung-Tae Lee4, Jae Yeol Lee5.
Abstract
Our previous research showed that N-carboxy-phenylsulfonyl hydrazide (scaffold A) could reduce LPS-stimulated PGE2 levels in RAW 264.7 macrophage cells by an inhibition of mPGES-1 enzyme. However, a number of scaffold A derivatives showed the drawbacks such as the formation of regioisomers and poor liver metabolic stability. In order to overcome these synthetic and metabolic problems, therefore, we decided to replace N-carboxy-phenylsulfonyl hydrazide (scaffold A) with N-carboxy-phenylsulfonamide (scaffold B) or N-amido-phenylsulfonamide frameworks (scaffold C) as a bioisosteric replacement. Among them, MPO-0186 (scaffold C) inhibited the production of PGE2 (IC50: 0.24 μM) in A549 cells via inhibition of mPGES-1 (IC50: 0.49 μM in a cell-free assay) and was found to be approximately 9- and 8-fold more potent than MK-886 as a reference inhibitor, respectively. A molecular docking study theoretically suggests that MPO-0186 could inhibit PGE2 production by blocking the PGH2 binding site of mPGES-1 enzyme. Furthermore, MPO-0186 demonstrated good liver metabolic stability and no significant inhibition observed in clinically relevant CYP isoforms except CYP2C19. This result provides a potential starting point for the development of selective and potent mPGES-1 inhibitor with a novel scaffold.Entities:
Keywords: Bioisosteric replacement; Inflammation; Molecular docking; PGE(2); mPGES-1 inhibitor
Year: 2021 PMID: 33775835 DOI: 10.1016/j.bmcl.2021.127992
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Bioorg Med Chem Lett ISSN: 0960-894X Impact factor: 2.823