Prospective CCR5 Small Molecule Antagonist Compound Design Using a Combined Mutagenesis/Modeling Approach

The viral resistance of marketed antiviral drugs including the emergence of new viral resistance of the only marketed CCR5 entry inhibitor, maraviroc, makes it necessary to develop new CCR5 allosteric inhibitors. A mutagenesis/modeling approach was used (a) to remove the potential hERG liability in...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011-10, Vol.133 (41), p.16477-16485
Hauptverfasser: Metz, Markus, Bourque, Elyse, Labrecque, Jean, Danthi, Sanjay J, Langille, Jonathan, Harwig, Curtis, Yang, Wen, Darkes, Marilyn C, Lau, Gloria, Santucci, Zefferino, Bridger, Gary J, Schols, Dominique, Fricker, Simon P, Skerlj, Renato T
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container_end_page 16485
container_issue 41
container_start_page 16477
container_title Journal of the American Chemical Society
container_volume 133
creator Metz, Markus
Bourque, Elyse
Labrecque, Jean
Danthi, Sanjay J
Langille, Jonathan
Harwig, Curtis
Yang, Wen
Darkes, Marilyn C
Lau, Gloria
Santucci, Zefferino
Bridger, Gary J
Schols, Dominique
Fricker, Simon P
Skerlj, Renato T
description The viral resistance of marketed antiviral drugs including the emergence of new viral resistance of the only marketed CCR5 entry inhibitor, maraviroc, makes it necessary to develop new CCR5 allosteric inhibitors. A mutagenesis/modeling approach was used (a) to remove the potential hERG liability in an otherwise very promising series of compounds and (b) to design a new class of compounds with an unique mutant fingerprint profile depending on residues in the N-terminus and the extracellular loop 2. On the basis of residues, which were identified by mutagenesis as key interaction sites, binding modes of compounds were derived and utilized for compound design in a prospective manner. The compounds were then synthesized, and in vitro evaluation not only showed that they had good antiviral potency but also fulfilled the requirement of low hERG inhibition, a criterion necessary because a potential approved drug would be administered chronically. This work utilized an interdisciplinary approach including medicinal chemistry, molecular biology, and computational chemistry merging the structural requirements for potency with the requirements of an acceptable in vitro profile for allosteric CCR5 inhibitors. The obtained mutant fingerprint profiles of CCR5 inhibitors were used to translate the CCR5 allosteric binding site into a general pharmacophore, which can be used for discovering new inhibitors.
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title Prospective CCR5 Small Molecule Antagonist Compound Design Using a Combined Mutagenesis/Modeling Approach
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