2 research outputs found
Identification and Optimization of a Ligand-Efficient Benzoazepinone Bromodomain and Extra Terminal (BET) Family Acetyl-Lysine Mimetic into the Oral Candidate Quality Molecule I‑BET432
The
bromodomain and extra terminal (BET) family of proteins
are
an integral part of human epigenome regulation, the dysregulation
of which is implicated in multiple oncology and inflammatory diseases.
Disrupting the BET family bromodomain acetyl-lysine (KAc) histone
protein–protein interaction with small-molecule KAc mimetics
has proven to be a disease-relevant mechanism of action, and multiple
molecules are currently undergoing oncology clinical trials. This
work describes an efficiency analysis of published GSK pan-BET bromodomain
inhibitors, which drove a strategic choice to focus on the identification
of a ligand-efficient KAc mimetic with the hypothesis that lipophilic
efficiency could be drastically improved during optimization. This
focus drove the discovery of the highly ligand-efficient and structurally
distinct benzoazepinone KAc mimetic. Following crystallography to
identify suitable growth vectors, the benzoazepinone core was optimized
through an explore-exploit structure–activity relationship
(SAR) approach while carefully monitoring lipophilic efficiency to
deliver I-BET432 (41) as an oral candidate quality molecule
Identification and Optimization of a Ligand-Efficient Benzoazepinone Bromodomain and Extra Terminal (BET) Family Acetyl-Lysine Mimetic into the Oral Candidate Quality Molecule I‑BET432
The
bromodomain and extra terminal (BET) family of proteins
are
an integral part of human epigenome regulation, the dysregulation
of which is implicated in multiple oncology and inflammatory diseases.
Disrupting the BET family bromodomain acetyl-lysine (KAc) histone
protein–protein interaction with small-molecule KAc mimetics
has proven to be a disease-relevant mechanism of action, and multiple
molecules are currently undergoing oncology clinical trials. This
work describes an efficiency analysis of published GSK pan-BET bromodomain
inhibitors, which drove a strategic choice to focus on the identification
of a ligand-efficient KAc mimetic with the hypothesis that lipophilic
efficiency could be drastically improved during optimization. This
focus drove the discovery of the highly ligand-efficient and structurally
distinct benzoazepinone KAc mimetic. Following crystallography to
identify suitable growth vectors, the benzoazepinone core was optimized
through an explore-exploit structure–activity relationship
(SAR) approach while carefully monitoring lipophilic efficiency to
deliver I-BET432 (41) as an oral candidate quality molecule