4 research outputs found
Design and Synthesis of Piperazine Sulfonamide Cores Leading to Highly Potent HIV‑1 Protease Inhibitors
Using the HIV-1 protease binding
mode of <b>MK-8718</b> and <b>PL-100</b> as inspiration,
a novel aspartate binding bicyclic piperazine sulfonamide core was
designed and synthesized. The resulting HIV-1 protease inhibitor containing
this core showed an 60-fold increase in enzyme binding affinity and
a 10-fold increase in antiviral activity relative to <b>MK-8718</b>
Discovery of a 3‑(4-Pyrimidinyl) Indazole (MLi-2), an Orally Available and Selective Leucine-Rich Repeat Kinase 2 (LRRK2) Inhibitor that Reduces Brain Kinase Activity
Leucine-rich repeat
kinase 2 (LRRK2) is a large, multidomain protein
which contains a kinase domain and GTPase domain among other regions.
Individuals possessing gain of function mutations in the kinase domain
such as the most prevalent G2019S mutation have been associated with
an increased risk for the development of Parkinson’s disease
(PD). Given this genetic validation for inhibition of LRRK2 kinase
activity as a potential means of affecting disease progression, our
team set out to develop LRRK2 inhibitors to test this hypothesis.
A high throughput screen of our compound collection afforded a number
of promising indazole leads which were truncated in order to identify
a minimum pharmacophore. Further optimization of these indazoles led
to the development of MLi-2 (<b>1</b>): a potent, highly selective,
orally available, brain-penetrant inhibitor of LRRK2
Discovery of MK-5172, a Macrocyclic Hepatitis C Virus NS3/4a Protease Inhibitor
A new class of HCV NS3/4a protease inhibitors containing
a P2 to P4 macrocyclic constraint was designed using a molecular modeling-derived strategy. Building on the profile of previous clinical compounds
and exploring the P2 and linker regions of the series allowed for
optimization of broad genotype and mutant enzyme potency, cellular
activity, and rat liver exposure following oral dosing. These studies
led to the identification of clinical candidate <b>15</b> (MK-5172),
which is active against genotype 1–3 NS3/4a and clinically
relevant mutant enzymes and has good plasma exposure and excellent
liver exposure in multiple species
Discovery of MK-8718, an HIV Protease Inhibitor Containing a Novel Morpholine Aspartate Binding Group
A novel HIV protease inhibitor was
designed using a morpholine
core as the aspartate binding group. Analysis of the crystal structure
of the initial lead bound to HIV protease enabled optimization of
enzyme potency and antiviral activity. This afforded a series of potent
orally bioavailable inhibitors of which MK-8718 was identified as
a compound with a favorable overall profile