Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10594161 | Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2011 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
Subtype specific ligands are needed to evaluate the therapeutic potential of modulating the brain's neuropeptide Y system. The benzothiazepine glycinamide 1a was identified as an NPY5 antagonist lead. While having acceptable solubility, the compound was found to suffer from high clearance and poor exposure. Optimization efforts are described targeting improvements in potency, microsomal stability, and PK properties. The low microsomal stability and poor PK properties were addressed through the optimization of the sulfonyl urea and replacement of the benzothiazepinone with other N-heteroaryl glycinamides. For example, the analogous benzoxazine glycinamide 2e has improvements in both affinity (human Y5 Ki 4Â nM vs 1a 27Â nM) and microsomal stability (human CLint 2.5Â L/min vs 1a 35Â L/min). However the brain penetration (B/P 43/430Â nM at 10Â mg/kg PO) remained an unresolved issue. Further optimization by decreasing the hydrogen bond donating properties and PSA provided potent and brain penetrant NPY5 antagonists such as 5f (human Y5 Ki 9Â nM, B/P 520/840Â nM 10Â mg/kg PO).
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Authors
Lingyun Wu, Kai Lu, Mahesh Desai, Mathivanan Packiarajan, Amita Joshi, Mohammad R. Marzabadi, Vrej Jubian, Kim Andersen, Gamini Chandrasena, Noel J. Boyle, Mary W. Walker,