10 research outputs found
Identification and hit-to-lead optimization of a novel class of CB1 antagonists
The discovery, synthesis and preliminary structure-activity relationships (SARs) of a novel class of CB1 antagonists is described. Initial optimization of benzimidazole-based screening hit 4 led to the identification of 'inverted' indole-based lead compound 18c with improved properties versus compound 4 including reduced AlogP, improved microsomal stability and improved aqueous solubility. Compound 18c demonstrates in vivo CB1 antagonist efficacy (CB1 agonist induced hypothermia model) and is orally bioavailable in rat
Eicosanoid regulation of debris-stimulated metastasis.
Cancer therapy reduces tumor burden via tumor cell death ("debris"), which can accelerate tumor progression via the failure of inflammation resolution. Thus, there is an urgent need to develop treatment modalities that stimulate the clearance or resolution of inflammation-associated debris. Here, we demonstrate that chemotherapy-generated debris stimulates metastasis by up-regulating soluble epoxide hydrolase (sEH) and the prostaglandin E2 receptor 4 (EP4). Therapy-induced tumor cell debris triggers a storm of proinflammatory and proangiogenic eicosanoid-driven cytokines. Thus, targeting a single eicosanoid or cytokine is unlikely to prevent chemotherapy-induced metastasis. Pharmacological abrogation of both sEH and EP4 eicosanoid pathways prevents hepato-pancreatic tumor growth and liver metastasis by promoting macrophage phagocytosis of debris and counterregulating a protumorigenic eicosanoid and cytokine storm. Therefore, stimulating the clearance of tumor cell debris via combined sEH and EP4 inhibition is an approach to prevent debris-stimulated metastasis and tumor growth
Identification and optimization of novel 2-(4-oxo-2-aryl-quinazolin-3(4H)-yl)acetamide vasopressin V3 (V1b) receptor antagonists
The discovery, synthesis, and preliminary structure–activity relationship (SAR) of a novel class of vasopressin V3 (V1b) receptor antagonists is described. Compound 1, identified by high throughput screening of a diverse, three million-member compound collection, prepared using ECLiPS™ technology, had good activity in a V3 binding assay (IC50 = 0.20 μM), but less than desirable physicochemical properties. Optimization of compound 1 yielded potent analogs 19 (IC50 = 0.31 μM) and 24 (IC50 = 0.12 μM) with improved drug-like characteristics
Synthesis and Biological Evaluation of Pyrazolo[1,5‑<i>a</i>]pyrimidine Compounds as Potent and Selective Pim‑1 Inhibitors
Pim-1
has emerged as an attractive target for developing therapeutic
agents for treating disorders involving abnormal cell growth, especially
cancers. Herein we present lead optimization, chemical synthesis and
biological evaluation of pyrazolo[1,5-<i>a</i>]pyrimidine
compounds as potent and selective inhibitors of Pim-1 starting from
a hit from virtual screening. These pyrazolo[1,5-<i>a</i>]pyrimidine compounds strongly inhibited Pim-1 and Flt-3 kinases.
Selected compounds suppressed both the phosphorylation of BAD protein
in a cell-based assay and 2-dimensional colony formation in a clonogenic
cell survival assay at submicromolar potency, suggesting that cellular activity was mediated through
inhibition of Pim-1. Moreover, these Pim-1 inhibitors did not show
significant <i>h</i>ERG inhibition at 30 μM concentration.
The lead compound proved to be highly selective against a panel of
119 oncogenic kinases, indicating it had an improved safety profile
compared with the first generation Pim-1 inhibitor SGI-1776
A Small-Molecule Inhibitor of PIM Kinases as a Potential Treatment for Urothelial Carcinomas
The proto-oncogene proviral integration site for moloney murine leukemia virus (PIM) kinases (PIM-1, PIM-2, and PIM-3) are serine/threonine kinases that are involved in a number of signaling pathways important to cancer cells. PIM kinases act in downstream effector functions as inhibitors of apoptosis and as positive regulators of G1-S phase progression through the cell cycle. PIM kinases are upregulated in multiple cancer indications, including lymphoma, leukemia, multiple myeloma, and prostate, gastric, and head and neck cancers. Overexpression of one or more PIM family members in patient tumors frequently correlates with poor prognosis. The aim of this investigation was to evaluate PIM expression in low- and high-grade urothelial carcinoma and to assess the role PIM function in disease progression and their potential to serve as molecular targets for therapy. One hundred thirty-seven cases of urothelial carcinoma were included in this study of surgical biopsy and resection specimens. High levels of expression of all three PIM family members were observed in both noninvasive and invasive urothelial carcinomas. The second-generation PIM inhibitor, TP-3654, displays submicromolar activity in pharmacodynamic biomarker modulation, cell proliferation studies, and colony formation assays using the UM-UC-3 bladder cancer cell line. TP-3654 displays favorable human ether-à-go-go-related gene and cytochrome P450 inhibition profiles compared with the first-generation PIM inhibitor, SGI-1776, and exhibits oral bioavailability. In vivo xenograft studies using a bladder cancer cell line show that PIM kinase inhibition can reduce tumor growth, suggesting that PIM kinase inhibitors may be active in human urothelial carcinomas
Synthesis and SAR studies of novel 2-(4-oxo-2-aryl-quinazolin-3(4H)-yl)acetamide vasopressin V1b receptor antagonists
Synthesis and structure–activity relationships (SAR) of a novel series of vasopressin V1b (V3) antagonists are described. 2-(4-Oxo-2-aryl-quinazolin-3(4H)-yl)acetamides have been identified with low nanomolar affinity for the V1b receptor and good selectivity with respect to related receptors V1a, V2 and oxytocin (OT). Optimised compound 12j demonstrates a good pharmacokinetic profile and activity in a mechanistic model of HPA dysfunction
Discovery and optimisation of a selective non-steroidal glucocorticoid receptor antagonist
High-throughput screening of 3.87 million compounds delivered a novel series of non-steroidal GR antagonists. Subsequent rounds of optimisation allowed progression from a non-selective ligand with a poor ADMET profile to an orally bioavailable, selective, stable, glucocorticoid receptor antagonist