Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1369172 | Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2013 | 4 Pages |
The kidney urea transport protein UT-B is an attractive target for the development of small-molecule inhibitors with a novel diuretic (‘urearetic’) action. Previously, two compounds in the triazolothienopyrimidine scaffold (1a and 1c) were reported as UT-B inhibitors. Compound 1c incorporates a 1,1-difluoroethyl group, which affords improved microsomal stability when compared to the corresponding ethyl-substituted compound 1a. Here, a small focused library (4a–4f) was developed around lead inhibitor 1c to investigate the requirement of an amidine-linked thiophene in the inhibitor scaffold. Two compounds (4a and 4b) with nanomolar inhibitory potency (IC50 ≈ 40 nM) were synthesized. Computational docking of lead structure 1c and 4a–4f into a homology model of the UT-B cytoplasmic surface suggested binding with the core heterocycle buried deep into the hydrophobic pore region of the protein.
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