1 research outputs found
Probing the Physicochemical Boundaries of Cell Permeability and Oral Bioavailability in Lipophilic Macrocycles Inspired by Natural Products
Cyclic peptide natural products contain
a variety of conserved,
nonproteinogenic structural elements such as d-amino acids
and amide N-methylation. In addition, many cyclic peptides incorporate
γ-amino acids and other elements derived from polyketide synthases.
We hypothesized that the position and orientation of these extended
backbone elements impact the ADME properties of these hybrid molecules,
especially their ability to cross cell membranes and avoid metabolic
degradation. Here we report the synthesis of cyclic hexapeptide diastereomers
containing γ-amino acids (e.g., statines) and systematically
investigate their structure–permeability relationships. These
compounds were much more water-soluble and, in many cases, were both
more membrane permeable and more stable to liver microsomes than a
similar non-statine-containing derivative. Permeability correlated
well with the extent of intramolecular hydrogen bonding observed in
the solution structures determined in the low-dielectric solvent CDCl<sub>3</sub>, and one compound showed an oral bioavailability of 21% in
rat. Thus, the incorporation of γ-amino acids offers a route
to increase backbone diversity and improve ADME properties in cyclic
peptide scaffolds