7 research outputs found
Synthesis and Biological Characterization of Aryl Uracil Inhibitors of Hepatitis C Virus NS5B Polymerase: Discovery of ABT-072, a <i>trans</i>-Stilbene Analog with Good Oral Bioavailability
ABT-072 is a non-nucleoside
HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitor that
was discovered as part of a program to identify new direct-acting
antivirals (DAAs) for the treatment of HCV infection. This compound
was identified during a medicinal chemistry effort to improve on an
original lead, inhibitor <b>1</b>, which we described in a previous
publication. Replacement of the amide linkage in <b>1</b> with
a trans-olefin resulted in improved compound permeability and solubility
and provided much better pharmacokinetic properties in preclinical
species. Replacement of the dihydrouracil in <b>1</b> with an
N-linked uracil provided better potency in the genotype 1 replicon
assay. Results from phase 1 clinical studies supported once-daily
oral dosing with ABT-072 in HCV infected patients. A phase 2 clinical
study that combined ABT-072 with the HCV protease inhibitor ABT-450
provided a sustained virologic response at 24 weeks after dosing (SVR<sub>24</sub>) in 10 of 11 patients who received treatment
Synthesis and Biological Characterization of Aryl Uracil Inhibitors of Hepatitis C Virus NS5B Polymerase: Discovery of ABT-072, a <i>trans</i>-Stilbene Analog with Good Oral Bioavailability
ABT-072 is a non-nucleoside
HCV NS5B polymerase inhibitor that
was discovered as part of a program to identify new direct-acting
antivirals (DAAs) for the treatment of HCV infection. This compound
was identified during a medicinal chemistry effort to improve on an
original lead, inhibitor <b>1</b>, which we described in a previous
publication. Replacement of the amide linkage in <b>1</b> with
a trans-olefin resulted in improved compound permeability and solubility
and provided much better pharmacokinetic properties in preclinical
species. Replacement of the dihydrouracil in <b>1</b> with an
N-linked uracil provided better potency in the genotype 1 replicon
assay. Results from phase 1 clinical studies supported once-daily
oral dosing with ABT-072 in HCV infected patients. A phase 2 clinical
study that combined ABT-072 with the HCV protease inhibitor ABT-450
provided a sustained virologic response at 24 weeks after dosing (SVR<sub>24</sub>) in 10 of 11 patients who received treatment
Discovery of ABT-267, a Pan-Genotypic Inhibitor of HCV NS5A
We
describe here <i>N</i>-phenylpyrrolidine-based inhibitors
of HCV NS5A with excellent potency, metabolic stability, and pharmacokinetics.
Compounds with 2<i>S</i>,5<i>S</i> stereochemistry
at the pyrrolidine ring provided improved genotype 1 (GT1) potency
compared to the 2<i>R</i>,5<i>R</i> analogues.
Furthermore, the attachment of substituents at the 4-position of the
central <i>N</i>-phenyl group resulted in compounds with
improved potency. Substitution with <i>tert</i>-butyl, as
in compound <b>38</b> (ABT-267), provided compounds with low-picomolar
EC<sub>50</sub> values and superior pharmacokinetics. It was discovered
that compound <b>38</b> was a pan-genotypic HCV inhibitor, with
an EC<sub>50</sub> range of 1.7–19.3 pM against GT1a, -1b,
-2a, -2b, -3a, -4a, and -5a and 366 pM against GT6a. Compound <b>38</b> decreased HCV RNA up to 3.10 log<sub>10</sub> IU/mL during
3-day monotherapy in treatment-naive HCV GT1-infected subjects and
is currently in phase 3 clinical trials in combination with an NS3
protease inhibitor with ritonavir (r) (ABT-450/r) and an NS5B non-nucleoside
polymerase inhibitor (ABT-333), with and without ribavirin
Highlights of the Structure–Activity Relationships of Benzimidazole Linked Pyrrolidines Leading to the Discovery of the Hepatitis C Virus NS5A Inhibitor Pibrentasvir (ABT-530)
Curative interferon
and ribavirin sparing treatments for hepatitis
C virus (HCV)-infected patients require a combination of mechanistically
orthogonal direct acting antivirals. A shared component of these treatments
is usually an HCV NS5A inhibitor. First generation FDA approved treatments,
including the component NS5A inhibitors, do not exhibit equivalent
efficacy against HCV virus genotypes 1–6. In particular, these
first generation NS5A inhibitors tend to select for viral drug resistance.
Ombitasvir is a first generation HCV NS5A inhibitor included as a
key component of Viekira Pak for the treatment of patients with HCV
genotype 1 infection. Since the launch of next generation HCV treatments,
functional cure for genotype 1–6 HCV infections has been achieved,
as well as shortened treatment duration across a wider spectrum of
genotypes. In this paper, we show how we have modified the anchor,
linker, and end-cap architecture of our NS5A inhibitor design template
to discover a next generation NS5A inhibitor pibrentasvir (ABT-530),
which exhibits potent inhibition of the replication of wild-type genotype
1–6 HCV replicons, as well as improved activity against replicon
variants demonstrating resistance against first generation NS5A inhibitors
Discovery of <i>N</i>‑(4-(2,4-Difluorophenoxy)-3-(6-methyl-7-oxo-6,7-dihydro‑1<i>H</i>‑pyrrolo[2,3‑<i>c</i>]pyridin-4-yl)phenyl)ethanesulfonamide (ABBV-075/Mivebresib), a Potent and Orally Available Bromodomain and Extraterminal Domain (BET) Family Bromodomain Inhibitor
The development of bromodomain and
extraterminal domain (BET) bromodomain inhibitors and their examination
in clinical studies, particularly in oncology settings, has garnered
substantial recent interest. An effort to generate novel BET bromodomain
inhibitors with excellent potency and drug metabolism and pharmacokinetics
(DMPK) properties was initiated based upon elaboration of a simple
pyridone core. Efforts to develop a bidentate interaction with a critical
asparagine residue resulted in the incorporation of a pyrrolopyridone
core, which improved potency by 9–19-fold. Additional structure–activity
relationship (SAR) efforts aimed both at increasing potency and improving
pharmacokinetic properties led to the discovery of the clinical candidate <b>63</b> (ABBV-075/mivebresib), which demonstrates excellent potency
in biochemical and cellular assays, advantageous exposures and half-life
both in animal models and in humans, and in vivo efficacy in mouse
models of cancer progression and inflammation