Rapid Assembly of a Library
of Lipophilic Iminosugars via the Thiol–Ene Reaction Yields
Promising Pharmacological Chaperones for the Treatment of Gaucher
Disease
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Abstract
A highly divergent route to lipophilic iminosugars that
utilizes the thiol–ene reaction was developed to enable the
rapid synthesis of a collection of 16 dideoxyiminoxylitols bearing
various different lipophilic substituents. Enzyme kinetic analyses
revealed that a number of these products are potent, low-nanomolar
inhibitors of human glucocerebrosidase that stabilize the enzyme to
thermal denaturation by up to 20 K. Cell based assays conducted on
Gaucher disease patient derived fibroblasts demonstrated that administration
of the compounds can increase lysosomal glucocerebrosidase activity
levels by therapeutically relevant amounts, as much as 3.2-fold in
cells homozygous for the p.N370S mutation and 1.4-fold in cells homozygous
for the p.L444P mutation. Several compounds elicited this increase
in enzyme activity over a relatively wide dosage range. The data assembled
here illustrate how the lipophilic moiety common to many glucocerebrosidase
inhibitors might be used to optimize a lead compound’s ability
to chaperone the protein in cellulo. The flexibility of this synthetic strategy makes it an attractive
approach to the rapid optimization of glycosidase inhibitor potency
and pharmacokinetic behavior