A hit deconstruction approach for the discovery of fetal hemoglobin inducers

[Display omitted] •Benzoxaborole compounds can be optimized by deconstruction and reconstruction.•The compounds have been optimized for cellular HbF induction, solubility, and PK.•The optimized compounds inhibit key RNA processing proteins. Beta-hemoglobinopathies such as sickle cell disease represe...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters 2018-12, Vol.28 (23-24), p.3676-3680
Hauptverfasser: Benowitz, Andrew B., Eberl, H. Christian, Erickson-Miller, Connie L., Gilmartin, Aidan G., Gore, Elizabeth R., Montoute, Monica N., Wu, Zining
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Benzoxaborole compounds can be optimized by deconstruction and reconstruction.•The compounds have been optimized for cellular HbF induction, solubility, and PK.•The optimized compounds inhibit key RNA processing proteins. Beta-hemoglobinopathies such as sickle cell disease represent a major global unmet medical need. De-repression of fetal hemoglobin in erythrocytes is a clinically validated approach for the management of sickle cell disease, but the only FDA-approved medicine for this purpose has limitations to its use. We conducted a phenotypic screen in human erythroid progenitor cells to identify molecules with the ability to de-repress fetal hemoglobin, which resulted in the identification of the benzoxaborole-containing hit compound 1. This compound was found to have modest cellular potency and lead-like pharmacokinetics, but no identifiable SAR to enable optimization. Systematic deconstruction of a closely related analog of 1 revealed the fragment-like carboxylic acid 12, which was then optimized to provide tetrazole 31, which had approximately 100-fold improved cellular potency compared to 1, high levels of oral exposure in rats, and excellent solubility.
ISSN:0960-894X
1464-3405
DOI:10.1016/j.bmcl.2018.10.032