3 research outputs found
Discovery of a Potent Dihydrooxadiazole Series of Non-ATP-Competitive MK2 (MAPKAPK2) Inhibitors
Inhibition of MK2 has been shown to offer advantages
over that of p38 MAPK in the development of cures for inflammatory
diseases such as arthritis. P38 MAPK knockout in mice was lethal,
whereas MK2-null mice demonstrated strong inhibition of disease progression
in collagen-induced arthritis and appeared normal and viable. However,
it is challenging to develop ATP-competitive MK2 inhibitors due to
high ATP binding affinity to the kinase. Non-ATP-competitive MK2 inhibitors
interact and bind to the kinase in a mode independent of ATP concentration,
which could provide better selectivity and cellular potency. Therefore,
it is desirable to identify non-ATP-competitive MK2 inhibitors. Through
structure optimization of lead compound <b>1</b>, a novel series
of dihydrooxadiazoles was discovered. Additional structure–activity
relationship (SAR) study of this series led to the identification of compound <b>38</b> as a non-ATP-competitive MK2 inhibitor with potent enzymatic
activity and good cellular potency. The SAR, synthesis, and biological
data of dihydrooxadiazole series are discussed
Discovery and Structure Enabled Synthesis of 2,6-Diaminopyrimidin-4-one IRAK4 Inhibitors
We
report the identification and synthesis of a series of aminopyrimidin-4-one
IRAK4 inhibitors. Through high throughput screening, an aminopyrimidine
hit was identified and modified via structure enabled design to generate
a new, potent, and kinase selective pyrimidin-4-one chemotype. This
chemotype is exemplified by compound <b>16</b>, which has potent
IRAK4 inhibition activity (IC<sub>50</sub> = 27 nM) and excellent
kinase selectivity (>100-fold against 99% of 111 tested kinases),
and compound <b>31</b>, which displays potent IRAK4 activity
(IC<sub>50</sub> = 93 nM) and good rat bioavailability (<i>F</i> = 42%)
Potent and Selective Amidopyrazole Inhibitors of IRAK4 That Are Efficacious in a Rodent Model of Inflammation
IRAK4 is a critical upstream kinase
in the IL-1R/TLR signaling
pathway. Inhibition of IRAK4 is hypothesized to be beneficial in the
treatment of autoimmune related disorders. A screening campaign identified
a pyrazole class of IRAK4 inhibitors that were determined by X-ray
crystallography to exhibit an unusual binding mode. SAR efforts focused
on the identification of a potent and selective inhibitor with good
aqueous solubility and rodent pharmacokinetics. Pyrazole C-3 piperidines
were well tolerated, with <i>N</i>-sulfonyl analogues generally
having good rodent oral exposure but poor solubility. <i>N</i>-Alkyl piperidines exhibited excellent solubility and reduced exposure.
Pyrazoles possessing N-1 pyridine and fluorophenyl substituents were
among the most active. Piperazine <b>32</b> was a potent enzyme
inhibitor with good cellular activity. Compound <b>32</b> reduced
the <i>in vivo</i> production of proinflammatory cytokines
and was orally efficacious in a mouse antibody induced arthritis disease
model of inflammation