Back to Search Start Over

Stepwise Structural Simplification of the Dihydroxyanthraquinone Moiety of a Multitarget Rhein-Based Anti-Alzheimer Lead to Improve Drug Metabolism and Pharmacokinetic Properties.

Authors :
Pont, Caterina
Sampietro, Anna
Pérez-Areales, F. Javier
Cristiano, Nunzia
Albalat, Agustí
Pérez, Belén
Bartolini, Manuela
De Simone, Angela
Andrisano, Vincenza
Barenys, Marta
Teixidó, Elisabet
Sabaté, Raimon
Loza, M. Isabel
Brea, José
Muñoz-Torrero, Diego
Source :
Pharmaceutics. Aug2024, Vol. 16 Issue 8, p982. 20p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Multitarget compounds have emerged as promising drug candidates to cope with complex multifactorial diseases, like Alzheimer's disease (AD). Most multitarget compounds are designed by linking two pharmacophores through a tether chain (linked hybrids), which results in rather large molecules that are particularly useful to hit targets with large binding cavities, but at the expense of suffering from suboptimal physicochemical/pharmacokinetic properties. Molecular size reduction by removal of superfluous structural elements while retaining the key pharmacophoric motifs may represent a compromise solution to achieve both multitargeting and favorable physicochemical/PK properties. Here, we report the stepwise structural simplification of the dihydroxyanthraquinone moiety of a rhein–huprine hybrid lead by hydroxy group removal—ring contraction—ring opening—ring removal, which has led to new analogs that retain or surpass the potency of the lead on its multiple AD targets while exhibiting more favorable drug metabolism and pharmacokinetic (DMPK) properties and safety profile. In particular, the most simplified acetophenone analog displays dual nanomolar inhibition of human acetylcholinesterase and butyrylcholinesterase (IC50 = 6 nM and 13 nM, respectively), moderately potent inhibition of human BACE-1 (48% inhibition at 15 µM) and Aβ42 and tau aggregation (73% and 68% inhibition, respectively, at 10 µM), favorable in vitro brain permeation, higher aqueous solubility (18 µM) and plasma stability (100/96/86% remaining in human/mouse/rat plasma after 6 h incubation), and lower acute toxicity in a model organism (zebrafish embryos; LC50 >> 100 µM) than the initial lead, thereby confirming the successful lead optimization by structural simplification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
19994923
Volume :
16
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Pharmaceutics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179384712
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/pharmaceutics16080982