Publication | Open Access
Discovery of Cyclic Sulfone Hydroxyethylamines as Potent and Selective β-Site APP-Cleaving Enzyme 1 (BACE1) Inhibitors: Structure-Based Design and in Vivo Reduction of Amyloid β-Peptides
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2012
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Pharmaceutical ScienceCore Scaffold SelectionPeptide ScienceChemical BiologyCyclic Sulfone HydroxyethylaminesPharmaceutical ChemistryAmyloid β-PeptidesMolecular PharmacologyMedicinal ChemistryProtein MisfoldingStructure-based DesignVivo ReductionBiochemistryNeuropharmacologyDrug DevelopmentCentral Core TemplatePharmacologyMolecular ModelingBiomolecular EngineeringNatural SciencesRational Drug DesignPeptide TherapeuticDrug Delivery SystemsMedicineSmall MoleculesDrug Discovery
Structure-based design of a series of cyclic hydroxyethylamine BACE1 inhibitors allowed the rational incorporation of prime- and nonprime-side fragments to a central core template without any amide functionality. The core scaffold selection and the structure-activity relationship development were supported by molecular modeling studies and by X-ray analysis of BACE1 complexes with various ligands to expedite the optimization of the series. The direct extension from P1-aryl- and heteroaryl moieties into the S3 binding pocket allowed the enhancement of potency and selectivity over cathepsin D. Restraining the design and synthesis of compounds to a physicochemical property space consistent with central nervous system drugs led to inhibitors with improved blood-brain barrier permeability. Guided by structure-based optimization, we were able to obtain highly potent compounds such as 60p with enzymatic and cellular IC(50) values of 2 and 50 nM, respectively, and with >200-fold selectivity over cathepsin D. Pharmacodynamic studies in APP51/16 transgenic mice at oral doses of 180 μmol/kg demonstrated significant reduction of brain Aβ levels.
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