Azepanone-based inhibitors of human and rat cathepsin K.

Article Details

Citation

Marquis RW, Ru Y, LoCastro SM, Zeng J, Yamashita DS, Oh HJ, Erhard KF, Davis LD, Tomaszek TA, Tew D, Salyers K, Proksch J, Ward K, Smith B, Levy M, Cummings MD, Haltiwanger RC, Trescher G, Wang B, Hemling ME, Quinn CJ, Cheng HY, Lin F, Smith WW, Janson CA, Zhao B, McQueney MS, D'Alessio K, Lee CP, Marzulli A, Dodds RA, Blake S, Hwang SM, James IE, Gress CJ, Bradley BR, Lark MW, Gowen M, Veber DF

Azepanone-based inhibitors of human and rat cathepsin K.

J Med Chem. 2001 Apr 26;44(9):1380-95.

PubMed ID
11311061 [ View in PubMed
]
Abstract

The synthesis, in vitro activities, and pharmacokinetics of a series of azepanone-based inhibitors of the cysteine protease cathepsin K (EC 3.4.22.38) are described. These compounds show improved configurational stability of the C-4 diastereomeric center relative to the previously published five- and six-membered ring ketone-based inhibitor series. Studies in this series have led to the identification of 20, a potent, selective inhibitor of human cathepsin K (K(i) = 0.16 nM) as well as 24, a potent inhibitor of both human (K(i) = 0.0048 nM) and rat (K(i,app) = 4.8 nM) cathepsin K. Small-molecule X-ray crystallographic analysis of 20 established the C-4 S stereochemistry as being critical for potent inhibition and that unbound 20 adopted the expected equatorial conformation for the C-4 substituent. Molecular modeling studies predicted the higher energy axial orientation at C-4 of 20 when bound within the active site of cathepsin K, a feature subsequently confirmed by X-ray crystallography. Pharmacokinetic studies in the rat show 20 to be 42% orally bioavailable. Comparison of the transport of the cyclic and acyclic analogues through CaCo-2 cells suggests that oral bioavailability of the acyclic derivatives is limited by a P-glycoprotein-mediated efflux mechanism. It is concluded that the introduction of a conformational constraint has served the dual purpose of increasing inhibitor potency by locking in a bioactive conformation as well as locking out available conformations which may serve as substrates for enzyme systems that limit oral bioavailability.

DrugBank Data that Cites this Article

Binding Properties
DrugTargetPropertyMeasurementpHTemperature (°C)
N-[(2S)-4-Methyl-1-oxo-1-{[(4S)-3-oxo-1-(2-pyridinylsulfonyl)-4-azepanyl]amino}-2-pentanyl]-1-benzofuran-2-carboxamideCathepsin KIC 50 (nM)70N/AN/ADetails
N-[(2S)-4-Methyl-1-oxo-1-{[(4S)-3-oxo-1-(2-pyridinylsulfonyl)-4-azepanyl]amino}-2-pentanyl]-1-benzofuran-2-carboxamideCathepsin KKi (nM)0.16N/AN/ADetails
N-[(2S)-4-Methyl-1-oxo-1-{[(4S)-3-oxo-1-(2-pyridinylsulfonyl)-4-azepanyl]amino}-2-pentanyl]-1-benzofuran-2-carboxamideCathepsin KIC 50 (nM)80N/AN/ADetails
N-[(2S)-4-Methyl-1-oxo-1-{[(4S)-3-oxo-1-(2-pyridinylsulfonyl)-4-azepanyl]amino}-2-pentanyl]-1-benzofuran-2-carboxamideCathepsin KKi (nM)980N/AN/ADetails
N2-[(Benzyloxy)carbonyl]-N-[(3R)-1-{N-[(benzyloxy)carbonyl]-L-leucyl}-4-oxo-3-pyrrolidinyl]-L-leucinamideCathepsin KKi (nM)2.3N/AN/ADetails