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FV-162 is a novel, orally bioavailable, irreversible proteasome inhibitor with improved pharmacokinetics displaying preclinical efficacy with continuous daily dosing

Authors :
David O'Neill
Amy M. Ruschak
Aaron D. Schimmer
Suzanne Trudel
Rose Hurren
Zhihua Li
Aisha Shamas-Din
Ahmed Aman
Rima Al-awar
Xioaming Wang
Lewis E. Kay
Zezhou Wang
Malik Slassi
Barry Press
Peter Dove
Carly Griffin
A Nachman
Y J Oh
S Climie
Elijus Undzys
Source :
Cell Death & Disease
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Approved proteasome inhibitors have advanced the treatment of multiple myeloma but are associated with serious toxicities, poor pharmacokinetics, and most with the inconvenience of intravenous administration. We therefore sought to identify novel orally bioavailable proteasome inhibitors with a continuous daily dosing schedule and improved therapeutic window using a unique drug discovery platform. We employed a fluorine-based medicinal chemistry technology to synthesize 14 novel analogs of epoxyketone-based proteasome inhibitors and screened them for their stability, ability to inhibit the chymotrypsin-like proteasome, and antimyeloma activity in vitro. The tolerability, pharmacokinetics, pharmacodynamic activity, and antimyeloma efficacy of our lead candidate were examined in NOD/SCID mice. We identified a tripeptide epoxyketone, FV-162, as a metabolically stable, potent proteasome inhibitor cytotoxic to human myeloma cell lines and primary myeloma cells. FV-162 had limited toxicity and was well tolerated on a continuous daily dosing schedule. Compared with the benchmark oral irreversible proteasome inhibitor, ONX-0192, FV-162 had a lower peak plasma concentration and longer half-life, resulting in a larger area under the curve (AUC). Oral FV-162 treatment induced rapid, irreversible inhibition of chymotrypsin-like proteasome activity in murine red blood cells and inhibited tumor growth in a myeloma xenograft model. Our data suggest that oral FV-162 with continuous daily dosing schedule displays a favorable safety, efficacy, and pharmacokinetic profile in vivo, identifying it as a promising lead for clinical evaluation in myeloma therapy.

Details

ISSN :
20414889
Volume :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cell deathdisease
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....9421e1397dd81f71798280ac6889b57a