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Discovery and Validation of a New Class of Small Molecule Toll-Like Receptor 4 (TLR4) Inhibitors
Authors
A Afrazi
A Afrazi
+46 more
A Barochia
AG Rajapakse
Amin Afrazi
Benjamin Eyer
C Kunz
Chhinder P. Sodhi
Christopher J. Guerriero
CL Chen
CL Leaphart
Congrong Ma
CP Sodhi
D Awla
DA Johnson
David J. Hackam
ET Rietschel
F Souza-Fonseca-Guimaraes
FF Yuan
H Carlsen
HM Kim
Hongpeng Jia
J Neu
Jeffrey L. Brodsky
John Ozolek
KH Lee
KR Bortoluci
L Bode
L Bode
L Bode
M Ciszewicz
M Good
M Pierer
Maria Branca
Matthew D. Neal
MD Neal
Misty Good
MM Fort
Peter Wipf
R Medzhitov
S Sakai
S Sanlioglu
Samithamby Jeyaseelan
SC Gribar
T Jilling
Thomas Prindle
WK den Dekker
WM Richardson
Publication date
12 June 2013
Publisher
'Public Library of Science (PLoS)'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
Many inflammatory diseases may be linked to pathologically elevated signaling via the receptor for lipopolysaccharide (LPS), toll-like receptor 4 (TLR4). There has thus been great interest in the discovery of TLR4 inhibitors as potential anti-inflammatory agents. Recently, the structure of TLR4 bound to the inhibitor E5564 was solved, raising the possibility that novel TLR4 inhibitors that target the E5564-binding domain could be designed. We utilized a similarity search algorithm in conjunction with a limited screening approach of small molecule libraries to identify compounds that bind to the E5564 site and inhibit TLR4. Our lead compound, C34, is a 2-acetamidopyranoside (MW 389) with the formula C17H27NO9, which inhibited TLR4 in enterocytes and macrophages in vitro, and reduced systemic inflammation in mouse models of endotoxemia and necrotizing enterocolitis. Molecular docking of C34 to the hydrophobic internal pocket of the TLR4 co-receptor MD-2 demonstrated a tight fit, embedding the pyran ring deep inside the pocket. Strikingly, C34 inhibited LPS signaling ex-vivo in human ileum that was resected from infants with necrotizing enterocolitis. These findings identify C34 and the β-anomeric cyclohexyl analog C35 as novel leads for small molecule TLR4 inhibitors that have potential therapeutic benefit for TLR4-mediated inflammatory diseases. © 2013 Neal et al
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