Structure-Based Discovery and Development of Highly Potent Dihydroorotate Dehydrogenase Inhibitors for Malaria Chemoprevention

Malaria remains a serious global health challenge, yet treatment and control programs are threatened by drug resistance. Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) was clinically validated as a target for treatment and prevention of malaria through human studies with DSM265, but currently no drugs against...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of medicinal chemistry 2024-12
Hauptverfasser: Nie, Zhe, Bonnert, Roger, Tsien, Jet, Deng, Xiaoyi, Higgs, Christopher, El Mazouni, Farah, Zhang, Xiaoyu, Li, Renzhe, Ho, Nhi, Feher, Victoria, Paulsen, Janet, Shackleford, David M, Katneni, Kasiram, Chen, Gong, Ng, Alice C F, McInerney, Mitchell, Wang, Wen, Saunders, Jessica, Collins, Daniel, Yan, Dandan, Li, Peng, Campbell, Michael, Patil, Rahul, Ghoshal, Atanu, Mondal, Pallab, Kundu, Abhijit, Chittimalla, Rajesh, Mahadeva, Muralikumar, Kokkonda, Sreekanth, White, John, Das, Rishi, Mukherjee, Partha, Angulo-Barturen, Iñigo, Jiménez-Díaz, María Belén, Malmstrom, Robert, Lawrenz, Morgan, Rodriguez-Granillo, Agustina, Rathod, Pradipsinh K, Tomchick, Diana R, Palmer, Michael J, Laleu, Benoît, Qin, Tian, Charman, Susan A, Phillips, Margaret A
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Malaria remains a serious global health challenge, yet treatment and control programs are threatened by drug resistance. Dihydroorotate dehydrogenase (DHODH) was clinically validated as a target for treatment and prevention of malaria through human studies with DSM265, but currently no drugs against this target are in clinical use. We used structure-based computational tools including free energy perturbation (FEP+) to discover highly ligand efficient, potent, and selective pyrazole-based DHODH inhibitors through a scaffold hop from a pyrrole-based series. Optimized pyrazole-based compounds were identified with low nM-to-pM cell potency and oral activity in a humanized SCID mouse malaria infection model. The lead compound DSM1465 is more potent and has improved absorption, distribution, metabolism and excretion/pharmacokinetic (ADME/PK) properties compared to DSM265 that support the potential for once-monthly chemoprevention at a low dose. This compound meets the objective of identifying compounds with potential to be used for monthly chemoprevention in Africa to support malaria elimination efforts.
ISSN:1520-4804
1520-4804
DOI:10.1021/acs.jmedchem.4c02394