Publication | Open Access
Nanomolar Potency and Metabolically Stable Inhibitors of Kidney Urea Transporter UT-B
144
Citations
19
References
2012
Year
Pharmaceutical ScienceUrea TransportersPharmaceutical ChemistrySystems PharmacologyMolecular PharmacologyRenal FunctionMetabolically Stable InhibitorsChronic Kidney DiseaseRenal PharmacologyUrea TransportKidney ResearchPharmacological AgentDrug DevelopmentPharmacologyAvailable AnaloguesUrologyNanomolar PotencyRational Drug DesignMedicineNephrologySmall MoleculesDrug DiscoveryQuantitative Pharmacology
Urea transporters, which include UT-B in kidney microvessels, are potential targets for development of drugs with a novel diuretic ('urearetic') mechanism. We recently identified, by high-throughput screening, a triazolothienopyrimidine UT-B inhibitor, 1, that selectively and reversibly inhibited urea transport with IC(50) = 25.1 nM and reduced urinary concentration in mice ( Yao et al. J. Am. Soc. Nephrol. , in press ). Here, we analyzed 273 commercially available analogues of 1 to establish a structure-activity series and synthesized a targeted library of 11 analogues to identify potent, metabolically stable UT-B inhibitors. The best compound, {3-[4-(1,1-difluoroethyl)benzenesulfonyl]thieno[2,3-e][1,2,3]triazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidin-5-yl}thiophen-2-ylmethylamine, 3k, had IC(50) of 23 and 15 nM for inhibition of urea transport by mouse and human UT-B, respectively, and ∼40-fold improved in vitro metabolic stability compared to 1. In mice, 3k accumulated in kidney and urine and reduced maximum urinary concentration. Triazolothienopyrimidines may be useful for therapy of diuretic-refractory edema in heart and liver failure.
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