A Pentacyclic Aurora Kinase Inhibitor (AKI-001) With High in Vivo Potency And Oral Bioavailability

Aurora kinase inhibitors have attracted a great deal of interest as a new class of antimitotic agents. We report a novel class of Aurora inhibitors based on a pentacyclic scaffold. A prototype pentacyclic inhibitor 32 (AKI-001) derived from two early lead structures improves upon the best properties...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of medicinal chemistry 2009-05, Vol.51 (15)
Hauptverfasser: Rawson, T.E., Ruth, M., Blackwood, E., Burdick, D., Corson, L., Dotson, J., Drummond, J., Fields, C., Georges, G.J., Goller, B., Halladay, J., Hunsaker, T., Kleinheinz, T., Krell, H.-W., Li, J., Liang, J., Limberg, A., McNutt, A., Moffat, J., Phillips, G., Ran, Y.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Aurora kinase inhibitors have attracted a great deal of interest as a new class of antimitotic agents. We report a novel class of Aurora inhibitors based on a pentacyclic scaffold. A prototype pentacyclic inhibitor 32 (AKI-001) derived from two early lead structures improves upon the best properties of each parent and compares favorably to a previously reported Aurora inhibitor, 39 (VX-680). The inhibitor exhibits low nanomolar potency against both Aurora A and Aurora B enzymes, excellent cellular potency (IC{sub 50} < 100 nM), and good oral bioavailability. Phenotypic cellular assays show that both Aurora A and Aurora B are inhibited at inhibitor concentrations sufficient to block proliferation. Importantly, the cellular activity translates to potent inhibition of tumor growth in vivo. An oral dose of 5 mg/kg QD is well tolerated and results in near stasis (92% TGI) in an HCT116 mouse xenograft model.
ISSN:0022-2623
1520-4804