3 research outputs found
Identification ofN,1,4,4-Tetramethyl-8-{[4-(4-methylpiperazin-1-yl)phenyl]amino}-4,5-dihydro-1H-pyrazolo[4,3-h]quinazoline-3-carboxamide (PHA-848125), a Potent, Orally Available Cyclin Dependent Kinase Inhibitor
The discovery of a novel class of inhibitors of cyclin dependent kinases (CDKs) is described. Starting from compound 1, showing good potency as inhibitor of CDKs but being poorly selective against a panel of serine−threonine and tyrosine kinases, new analogues were synthesized. Enhancement in selectivity, antiproliferative activity against A2780 human ovarian carcinoma cells, and optimization of the physical properties and pharmacokinetic profile led to the identification of highly potent and orally available compounds. Compound 28 (PHA-848125), which in the preclinical xenograft A2780 human ovarian carcinoma model showed good efficacy and was well tolerated upon repeated daily treatments, was identified as a drug candidate for further development. Compound 28 is currently undergoing phase I and phase II clinical trials
Discovery of Entrectinib: A New 3‑Aminoindazole As a Potent Anaplastic Lymphoma Kinase (ALK), c‑ros Oncogene 1 Kinase (ROS1), and Pan-Tropomyosin Receptor Kinases (Pan-TRKs) inhibitor
Anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK)
is a receptor tyrosine kinase
responsible for the development of different tumor types. Despite
the remarkable clinical activity of crizotinib (Xalkori), the first
ALK inhibitor approved in 2011, the emergence of resistance mutations
and of brain metastases frequently causes relapse in patients. Within
our ALK drug discovery program, we identified compound <b>1</b>, a novel 3-aminoindazole active on ALK in biochemical and in cellular
assays. Its optimization led to compound <b>2</b> (entrectinib),
a potent orally available ALK inhibitor active on ALK-dependent cell
lines, efficiently penetrant the blood–brain barrier (BBB)
in different animal species and highly efficacious in in vivo xenograft
models. Moreover, entrectinib resulted to be strictly potent on the
closely related tyrosine kinases ROS1 and TRKs recently found constitutively
activated in several tumor types. Entrectinib is currently undergoing
phase I/II clinical trial for the treatment of patients affected by
ALK-, ROS1-, and TRK-positive tumors