| Literature DB >> 33787273 |
Young-Hwan Jung1, Veronica Salmaso1, Zhiwei Wen1, John M Bennett1, Ngan B Phung1, David I Lieberman1, Varun Gopinatth1, John C R Randle2, Zhoumou Chen3, Daniela Salvemini3, Tadeusz P Karcz4, Donald N Cook4, Kenneth A Jacobson1.
Abstract
A known zwitterionic, heterocyclic P2Y14R antagonist 3a was substituted with diverse groups on the central phenyl and terminal piperidine moieties, following a computational selection process. The most potent analogues contained an uncharged piperidine bioisostere, prescreened in silico, while an aza-scan (central phenyl ring) reduced P2Y14R affinity. Piperidine amide 11, 3-aminopropynyl 19, and 5-(hydroxymethyl)isoxazol-3-yl) 29 congeners in the triazole series maintained moderate receptor affinity. Adaption of 5-(hydroxymethyl)isoxazol-3-yl gave the most potent naphthalene-containing (32; MRS4654; IC50, 15 nM) and less active phenylamide-containing (33) scaffolds. Thus, a zwitterion was nonessential for receptor binding, and molecular docking and dynamics probed the hydroxymethylisoxazole interaction with extracellular loops. Also, amidomethyl ester prodrugs were explored to reversibly block the conserved carboxylate group to provide neutral analogues, which were cleavable by liver esterase, and in vivo efficacy demonstrated. We have, in stages, converted zwitterionic antagonists into neutral molecules designed to produce potent P2Y14R antagonists for in vivo application.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33787273 PMCID: PMC8317135 DOI: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.1c00164
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Med Chem ISSN: 0022-2623 Impact factor: 7.446