Although the S3 pocket of the thrombin active site is lined with lipophilic amino acid residues, the accommodation of polarity within the lipophilic P3 moiety of small molecule inhibitors is possible provided that the polar functionality is capable of pointing away from the binding pocket outwards toward solvent while simultaneously allowing the lipophilic portion of the P3 ligand to interact with the S3 amino acid residues. Manipulation of this motif provided the means to effect optimization of functional potency, in vivo antithrombotic efficacy and oral bioavailability in a series of 3-aminopyrazinone thrombin inhibitors which contained non-charged groups at the P1 position.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGuided by X-ray crystallography of thrombin-inhibitor complexes and molecular modeling, alkylation of the N1 nitrogen of the imidazole P1 ligand of the pyridinoneacetamide thrombin inhibitor 1 with various acetamide moieties furnished inhibitors with significantly improved thrombin potency, trypsin selectivity, functional in vitro anticoagulant potency and in vivo antithrombotic efficacy. In the pyrazinoneacetamide series, oral bioavailability was also improved.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrevious reports from our laboratories described potent tripeptide thrombin inhibitors which incorporate heterocycle-substituted chlorophenyl groups in the P1 position. Using these as lead compounds for further optimization, we identified sites of metabolism and designed analogs with 4-fluoroproline in P2 and cyclopropane-containing side chains in P3 as an approach to reducing metabolism and improving their oral pharmacokinetic performance. The large (300-fold) difference in potency between analogs containing (4R)- and (4S)-4-fluoroproline was rationalized by analyzing inhibitor-enzyme interactions in crystal structures of related compounds and by molecular modeling which indicated that the more potent (4R)-4-fluoroproline isomer stabilizes a proline ring conformation that is preferred for binding to the enzyme.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite their relatively weak basicity, simple azoles, specifically imidazoles and aminothiazoles, can function as potent surrogates for the more basic amines (e.g., alkyl amines, amidines, guanidines, etc.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThrombin-inhibitor X-ray crystal structures, in combination with the installation of binding elements optimized within the pyrazinone series of thrombin inhibitors, were utilized to transform a weak triazolopyrimidine lead into a series of potent oxazolopyridines. A modification intended to attenuate plasma protein binding (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn this study, we have demonstrated that the critical hydrogen bonding motif of the established 3-aminopyrazinone thrombin inhibitors can be effectively mimicked by a 2-aminopyridine N-oxide. As this peptidomimetic core is more resistant toward oxidative metabolism, it also overcomes the metabolic liability associated with the pyrazinones. An optimization study of the P(1) benzylamide delivered the potent thrombin inhibitor 21 (K(i) = 3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOptimization of a previously reported thrombin inhibitor, 9-hydroxy-9-fluorenylcarbonyl-l-prolyl-trans-4-aminocyclohexylmethylamide (1), by replacing the aminocyclohexyl P1 group provided a new lead structure, 9-hydroxy-9-fluorenylcarbonyl-l-prolyl-2-aminomethyl-5-chlorobenzylamide (2), with improved potency (K(i) = 0.49 nM for human thrombin, 2x APTT = 0.37 microM in human plasma) and pharmacokinetic properties (F = 39%, iv T(1/2) = 13 h in dogs).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFModification of lead compound 1 by reducing lipophilicity in the P3 group produced a series of low molecular weight thrombin inhibitors with excellent potency in functional assays, metabolic stability, and oral bioavailability. These modifications led to the identification of two optimized compounds, 14 and 16.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn an effort to discover potent, clinically useful thrombin inhibitors, a rapid analogue synthetic approach was used to explore the P(1) region. Various benzylamines were coupled to a pyridine/pyrazinone P(2)-P(3) template. One compound with an o-thiadiazole benzylic substitution was found to have a thrombin K(i) of 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThrombin inhibitors incorporating o-aminoalkylbenzylamides in the P1 position were designed, synthesized and found to have enhanced potency and selectivity in several different structural classes. X-ray crystallographic analysis of compound 24 bound in the alpha-thrombin-hirugen complex provides an explanation for these unanticipated results.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of potent and selective proline- and pyrazinone-based macrocyclic thrombin inhibitors is described. Detailed SAR studies led to the incorporation of specific functional groups in the tether that enhanced functional activity against thrombin and provided exquisite selectivity against trypsin and tPA. X-ray crystallography and molecular modeling studies revealed the inhibitor-enzyme interactions responsible for this selectivity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe a series of highly potent and efficacious thrombin inhibitors based on a 3-amino-4-sulfonylpyridinone acetamide template. The functionally dense sulfonyl group stabilizes the aminopyridinone, conformationally constrains the 4-substituent, and forms a hydrogen bond to the insertion loop tyrosine OH. We also describe a related series of fused bicyclic dihydrothiadiazinedioxide derivatives, of which one had improved pharmacokinetics in dogs after oral dosing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioorg Med Chem Lett
April 2003
In this manuscript we demonstrate that a modification principally directed toward the improvement of the aqueous solubility (i.e., introduction a P3 pyridine N-oxide) of the previous lead compound afforded a new series of potent orally bioavailable P1 N-benzylamide thrombin inhibitors.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStarting from a 2-amino-6-methylpyridine P1 group and following a strategy of enlarging it whilst reducing its polarity, we have developed a series of potent, moderately basic azaindoles which are intrinsically much more selective for thrombin versus trypsin. Certain pyrazinone acetamide azaindole derivatives have pharmacokinetic parameters after oral administration to dogs, or efficacy in vitro, comparable to an optimized pyrazinone acetamide 2-amino-6-methylpyridine derivative.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUse of a chlorophenoxyacetamide P1 group with a pyridinone acetamide P2/P3 gave an exceptionally potent thrombin inhibitor (K(i)=40 pM). Truncation of the molecule at the N-terminus gave unique, low nanomolar, non-covalent thrombin inhibitors which do not have a group to fill thrombin's 'distal binding pocket'. A co-crystal structure indicates the importance of an intramolecular hydrogen bond between the P1 side chain and P1/P2 amide link in this series.
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