Hydrophilic, Potent, and Selective 7-Substituted 2-Aminoquinolines as Improved Human Neuronal Nitric Oxide Synthase Inhibitors.

J Med Chem

Department of Chemistry, Department of Molecular Biosciences, Chemistry of Life Processes Institute, Center for Molecular Innovation and Drug Discovery, Northwestern University, Evanston, Illinois 60208-3113, United States.

Published: August 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) is being explored as a target for creating new treatments for neurodegenerative diseases, but existing inhibitors have issues with bioavailability and selectivity.
  • Researchers experimented with modifying 2-aminoquinolines by truncating their structure and adding hydrophilic groups to enhance their effectiveness specifically on human nNOS while reducing unwanted interactions with other proteins.
  • Their findings showed that certain modifications, particularly with benzonitriles, significantly improved both the potency and selectivity of these compounds while maintaining favorable absorption properties and minimizing off-target binding in the central nervous system.

Article Abstract

Neuronal nitric oxide synthase (nNOS) is a target for development of antineurodegenerative agents. Most nNOS inhibitors mimic l-arginine and have poor bioavailability. 2-Aminoquinolines showed promise as bioavailable nNOS inhibitors but suffered from low human nNOS inhibition, low selectivity versus human eNOS, and significant binding to other CNS targets. We aimed to improve human nNOS potency and selectivity and reduce off-target binding by (a) truncating the original scaffold or (b) introducing a hydrophilic group to interrupt the lipophilic, promiscuous pharmacophore and promote interaction with human nNOS-specific His342. We synthesized both truncated and polar 2-aminoquinoline derivatives and assayed them against recombinant NOS enzymes. Although aniline and pyridine derivatives interact with His342, benzonitriles conferred the best rat and human nNOS inhibition. Both introduction of a hydrophobic substituent next to the cyano group and aminoquinoline methylation considerably improved isoform selectivity. Most importantly, these modifications preserved Caco-2 permeability and reduced off-target CNS binding.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5570656PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.7b00835DOI Listing

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