Semicarbazone-based inhibitors of cathepsin K, are they prodrugs for aldehyde inhibitors?

Starting from potent aldehyde inhibitors with poor drug properties, derivatization to semicarbazones led to the identification of a series of semicarbazone-based cathepsin K inhibitors with greater solubility and better pharmacokinetic profiles than their parent aldehydes. Furthermore, a representat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters 2006-02, Vol.16 (4), p.978-983
Hauptverfasser: Adkison, Kim K., Barrett, David G., Deaton, David N., Gampe, Robert T., Hassell, Anne M., Long, Stacey T., McFadyen, Robert B., Miller, Aaron B., Miller, Larry R., Payne, J. Alan, Shewchuk, Lisa M., Wells-Knecht, Kevin J., Willard, Derril H., Wright, Lois L.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Starting from potent aldehyde inhibitors with poor drug properties, derivatization to semicarbazones led to the identification of a series of semicarbazone-based cathepsin K inhibitors with greater solubility and better pharmacokinetic profiles than their parent aldehydes. Furthermore, a representative semicarbazone inhibitor attenuated bone resorption in an ex vivo rat calvarial bone resorption model. However, based on enzyme inhibition comparisons at neutral pH, semicarbazone hydrolysis rates, and 13C NMR experiments, these semicarbazones probably function as prodrugs of aldehydes. Starting from potent aldehyde inhibitors with poor drug properties, derivatization to semicarbazones led to the identification of a series of semicarbazone-based cathepsin K inhibitors with greater solubility and better pharmacokinetic profiles than their parent aldehydes. Furthermore, a representative semicarbazone inhibitor attenuated bone resorption in an ex vivo rat calvarial bone resorption model. However, based on enzyme inhibition comparisons at neutral pH, semicarbazone hydrolysis rates, and 13C NMR experiments, these semicarbazones probably function as prodrugs of aldehydes.
ISSN:0960-894X
1464-3405
DOI:10.1016/j.bmcl.2005.10.108