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Use of a Conformational-Switching Mechanism to Modulate Exposed Polarity: Discovery of CCR2 Antagonist BMS-741672

Authors :
Mary Ellen Cvijic
Andrew J. Tebben
Jian Pang
Mary F. Malley
Ruowei Mo
Joseph B. Santella
Songmei Xu
Qihong Zhao
Douglas G. Batt
Jing Chen
Anne Rose
Bei Wang
Hong Shi
Marta Dabros
Anurag S. Srivastava
Percy H. Carter
Purnima Khandelwal
Yang Michael G
Gardner Daniel S
Gregory D. Brown
Sandhya Mandlekar
Michael Galella
Rulin Zhao
Zili Xiao
John V. Duncia
Sarah C. Traeger
Joel C. Barrish
Robert J. Cherney
Soo S. Ko
Source :
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters. 10:300-305
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2019.

Abstract

[Image: see text] We encountered a dilemma in the course of studying a series of antagonists of the G-protein coupled receptor CC chemokine receptor-2 (CCR2): compounds with polar C3 side chains exhibited good ion channel selectivity but poor oral bioavailability, whereas compounds with lipophilic C3 side chains exhibited good oral bioavailability in preclinical species but poor ion channel selectivity. Attempts to solve this through the direct modulation of physicochemical properties failed. However, the installation of a protonation-dependent conformational switching mechanism resolved the problem because it enabled a highly selective and relatively polar molecule to access a small population of a conformer with lower polar surface area and higher membrane permeability. Optimization of the overall properties in this series yielded the CCR2 antagonist BMS-741672 (7), which embodied properties suitable for study in human clinical trials.

Details

ISSN :
19485875
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....df5aa828abdf2f0d6f0a23ce2ce17d65
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/acsmedchemlett.8b00439