2 research outputs found
Benzazepinones and Benzoxazepinones as Antagonists of Inhibitor of Apoptosis Proteins (IAPs) Selective for the Second Baculovirus IAP Repeat (BIR2) Domain
XIAP is a key regulator of apoptosis,
and its overexpression in
cancer cells may contribute to their survival. The antiapoptotic function
of XIAP derives from its BIR domains, which bind to and inhibit pro-apoptotic
caspases. Most known IAP inhibitors are selective for the BIR3 domain
and bind to cIAP1 and cIAP2 as well as XIAP. Pathways activated upon
cIAP binding contribute to the function of these compounds. Inhibitors
selective for XIAP should exert pro-apoptotic effects through competition
with the terminal caspases. This paper details our synthetic explorations
of a novel XIAP BIR2-selective benzazepinone screening hit with a
focus on increasing BIR2 potency and overcoming high in vivo clearance.
These efforts led to the discovery of benzoxazepinone <b>40</b>, a potent BIR2-selective inhibitor with good in vivo pharmacokinetic
properties which potentiates apoptotic signaling in a manner mechanistically
distinct from that of known pan-IAP inhibitors
Optimization of Benzodiazepinones as Selective Inhibitors of the X‑Linked Inhibitor of Apoptosis Protein (XIAP) Second Baculovirus IAP Repeat (BIR2) Domain
The
IAPs are key regulators of the apoptotic pathways and are commonly
overexpressed in many cancer cells. IAPs contain one to three BIR
domains that are crucial for their inhibitory function. The pro-survival
properties of XIAP come from binding of the BIR domains to the pro-apoptotic
caspases. The BIR3 domain of XIAP binds and inhibits caspase 9, while
the BIR2 domain binds and inhibits the terminal caspases 3 and 7.
While XIAP BIR3 inhibitors have previously been reported, they also
inhibit cIAP1/2 and promote the release of TNFα, potentially
limiting their therapeutic utility. This paper will focus on the optimization
of selective XIAP BIR2 inhibitors leading to the discovery of highly
potent benzodiazepinone <b>36</b> (IC<sub>50</sub> = 45 nM),
which has high levels of selectivity over XIAP BIR3 and cIAP1 BIR2/3
and shows efficacy in a xenograft pharmacodynamic model monitoring
caspase activity while not promoting the release of TNFα in
vitro