3. Pyrimidine Based Drugs for the Treatment of Cancer
Pyrimidines have myriad biological activities, including as anticancer pharmacophores. Zhang et al. have explored the role of pyrimidine rings as anticancer agents in breast cancer cell lines [
33]. Triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) is a heterogenous aggressive breast cancer which leads to high mortality rates due to distant metastasis and lack of efficient targeted therapeutics [
34].
Focal adhesion kinase (FAK) is a non-receptor tyrosine kinase which plays a significant role in integrin-activated signal transduction by initiating a cascade of biological functions [
35]. These FAK-mediated signaling pathways lead to tumor progression and metastasis by regulating proliferation through invasion and cell survival strategies. Breast cancer cells overexpress FAK kinases, which in turn activate FAK signaling pathways for cell proliferation and metastasis. Thus, inhibition of the FAK kinase could potentially slow the signaling that leads to the spread of TNBC.
The synthesis of potential FAK inhibitors is shown in
Scheme 9. Initial S
NAr reaction of 2,4,5-trichloropyrimidine (
17) with 2-amino-
N-methylbenzamide (
66) using sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO
3) in ethanol afforded the monosubstituted pyrimidine
67. A second S
NAr reaction on
67 by methyl 2-(4-aminophenyl)acetate (
68) promoted by 12 N hydrochloric acid (HCl) in isopropanol yielded the 2,4-diamino-5-chloropyrimidine
69. This compound was then condensed with 1,2,5-oxadiazole-2-oxide derivatives
70 [
36] in the presence of
N-(3-dimethylaminopropyl)-
N’-ethylcarbodiimide hydrochloride (EDAC) and 4-(dimethylamino)pyridine (DMAP) to provide targets
71.
The biological results in the paper pinpointed compound
72, which exhibited FAK inhibition (IC
50 = 27.4 nM) and displayed a strong inhibitory effect on cell proliferation with an IC
50 = 0.126 μM. The compound further exhibited potent inhibitory effects on an MDA-MB-231 TNBC cell line but displayed a 19-fold lesser effect on non-cancer MCF10A, giving a nearly 20-fold window for cell differentiation. Importantly, treatment with
72 inhibited lung metastasis of TNBC more potently than known compound TAE226 (see
Supplementary Materials) in mice. The compound also exhibited some off-target activity by showing significant inhibition activity against matrix metalloproteinase-2 (MMP-2) and MMP-9. A pharmacodynamic effect was also observed in a BALB/c nude mouse model by inoculation with MDA-MB-231 TNBC cells in the tail vein. Once the metastatic nodules were formed, the mice were randomly injected with
72 over a period of 30 days. It was found that
72 at 15 mg/kg significantly reduced the lung tumor nodules relative to the vehicle-treated control.
Concurrent with the work of Zhang, the Badawi group was also intent on developing a drug scaffold to challenge TNBC using
N-pyrimidin-4-ylhydrazones [
37]. Though the authors mentioned breast cancer as their focus, they did not clearly define their goal in this work. The report indicates they were leaning toward the epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) or the estrogen receptor as possible targets for inhibition.
The preparation of prospective drug compounds for this study are shown in
Scheme 10. This involved reaction of cyano ester
73 and methyl carbamimidothioate (
74) using NaOAc in DMF to prepare dihydropyrimidinone
75 by a known method [
38]. Compound
75 was then treated with a series of cyclic aliphatic amines to provide
76. Exposure of
76 to POCl
3 and
N,
N-dimethylaniline at 60 °C gave derivatives
77 which were reacted with hydrazine to deliver hydrazinyl derivatives
78. The hydrazinyl function of these structures was finally condensed with benzaldehyde (
79) or acetophenones
81 to generate the requisite pyrimidine–hydrazone conjugates
80 and
82, respectively.
Preliminary screening for antiproliferative activity revealed that some screened candidates exhibited nearly equal IC
50 values of 0.87–12.91 μM in MCF-7 and 1.75–9.46 μM in MDA-MB-231 cells, and better growth inhibition activities than those of the positive control 5-Fluorouracil (5-FU, see
Supplementary Materials)) which showed IC
50 values of 17.02 μM and 11.73 μM, respectively. Compound
83 offered the best selectivity index with respect to both MCF-7 and MDA-MB-231 cancer cells in comparison with 5-FU and elicited the highest increase in caspase 9 levels in MCF-7 treated samples, attaining 27.13 ± 0.54 ng/mL compared with 19.011 ± 0.40 ng/mL observed from a Staurosporine (see
Supplementary Materials) standard.
Research by El Hamd et al. sought to develop imidazole–pyrimidine–sulfonamide hybrids as inhibitors for the EGFR in mutant cancer cells [
39]. Currently, there are many research groups across the world interested in developing inhibitors for EGFR, which plays a crucial role in many human cancers. EGFR, a member of the ErbB subfamily of tyrosine kinases, is overexpressed in many cancers, including those of the breast, colon, ovaries and prostrate [
40]. Due to its impact on cancer progression, many therapies are currently approved for this target, including notables such as Cetuxiab, Pantitumumab and Necitumumab in antibody treatment (see
Supplementary Materials) and Neratinib, Gefitinib, Lapatinib, Afatinib and Vandetinib in small molecule treatment (see
Supplementary Materials).
Pyrimidine pharmacophores are well established as anti-EGFR lung cancer agents, and the authors in this work proposed to couple the pyrimidine ring with a sulfonamide core to bring dual activity against EGFR/human epidermal growth factor receptor 2 (HER2) breast cancer cell lines [
41]. Additionally, the authors were also interested in developing inhibitors against drug-resistant mutant EGFR-L858R/T790M/C797S cell lines.
Scheme 11 outlines a multi-component synthesis route to access
N-(pyrimidin-2-yl) 4-(2-aryl-4,5-diphenyl-1
H-imizazol-1-yl)benzenesulfonamides
87. The reactions were carried out using 4-amino-
N-(pyrimidin-2-yl)benzenesulfonamide (
84), aryl aldehydes
85, and benzil (
86) with ammonium acetate (NH
4OAc) and dimethylamine using diethyl ammonium hydrogen sulfate (ionic liquid) under reflux to afford the final targets
87.
The compounds synthesized were screened against a panel of 60 cancer cell lines at a single dose of 10 μM at the National Cancer Institute. The results revealed 9 compounds that showed excellent cytotoxicity against all tested cell lines with growth inhibitions up to 95%. Two compounds, 88 and 89, demonstrated inhibition against HER2 (IC50 = 81 ± 40 ng/mL and 208 ± 110 ng/mL, respectively), against the EGFR-L858R mutant (IC50 = 59 ± 30 ng/mL and 112 ± 60 ng/mL, respectively), and against the EGFR-T790M mutant (IC50 = 49 ± 20 ng/mL and 152 ± 70 ng/mL, respectively). Both compounds induced MCF-7 cell death with a Bax/Bcl-2 expression ratio pointing to a mitochondrial apoptosis pathway. The authors are currently optimizing the active candidates to identify the most promising inhibitors for development.
The work of Zhang et al. expanded the scope of EGFR inhibitors, especially for targeting non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC) cell lines [
42]. As mutation or overexpression of EGFR is the main cause of NSCLC, it is considered the main target for treating this disease [
43]. The authors focused on a fourth-generation reversible EGFR-tyrosine kinase inhibitor (TKI) by targeting the cysteine in the active binding site and focusing on the mutant EGFR cancer cell lines. Gefitinib and Erlotinib are first-generation EFGR-TKIs and have been shown to be very effective in NSCLC patients [
44,
45]. The gatekeeper mutation T790M in the ATP binding domain in EGFR is the primary mechanism of resistance which first develops in patients after 6–12 months of treatment. Considering this new mutant, second- and third-generation EGFR-TKIs were developed which display potent activity against EGFR-T790M while sparing WT cells.
A generalized route to the required compounds for this study is outlined in
Scheme 12. S
NAr reaction of 5-bromo-2,4-dichloropyrimidine (
90) with various anilines in the presence of DIPEA in isopropanol afforded intermediates
91. The pyrimidine ring of
91 was subjected to a second nucleophilic substitution with various amines (mostly aniline derivatives) in the presence of
p-TsOH·H
2O in butanol to afford bromopyrimidines
92. Finally, these bromides were coupled under Suzuki–Miyaura conditions with various arylboronate esters
93 using Pd(dppf)Cl
2 and potassium acetate (KOAc) in dioxane to furnish drug candidates
94.
The authors screened the newly designed and synthesized 2-(phenylamino)pyrimidine derivatives from this sequence for activity against EGFR triple mutant cell lines. One compound,
95, showed a promising IC
50 value of 0.2 ± 0.01 μM against proliferation of the EFGR-Dell9/T790M/C797S and EGFR-L858R/T790M/C797S cell lines. The same compound exhibited a slightly higher antiproliferative activity than the commercial drug Brigatinib (see
Supplementary Materials). Most of the compounds exhibited weak activities on EGFR-WT, which indicates that the compound was selective for mutant EGFR. Compound
95 also significantly inhibited EGFR phosphorylation, induced apoptosis in EGFR-Dell9/T790M/C797S, and arrested the cell cycle at the G2/M phase. The results indicate that
95 was a potent fourth-generation reversible EGFR-TKI which warranted further study.
As with most medicinal agents, drug resistance has become an issue for Osimetinib, and this has been a driving force behind the development of EFGR inhibitors. This drug, which is currently used for NSCLC, showed drug resistance after the median survival time of 9.6 months [
46]. Thus, Xu et al. determined to solve this problem by developing fourth-generation inhibitors with additional interactions between the compound and the protein to compensate for the loss of the conventional covalent cysteine interaction [
47].
The 2,4-di(arylamino)pyrimidine core is a key ring scaffold for maintenance of activity in these known inhibitors of mutant EGFR kinases [
48]. All compounds synthesized in this work were designed following a molecular modelling analysis of the crystal structure of EGFR-L858R/T790M/C797S (PDB code: 6LUD) using Autodock 4.2 software. The synthesis of prototype molecules is shown in
Scheme 13. S
NAr reaction between 2,4,5-trichloropyrimidine (
17) and phenylenediamine (
96) in ACN at −10 °C provided the C4-substituted pyrimidine derivative
97. This compound subsequently underwent amide formation with acryloyl chloride and DIPEA in dioxane to afford
98. Some of the pyrimidinamides were also prepared from acetic anhydride (Ac
2O) in the presence of TEA in ethyl acetate. Pyrimidinamides
98 were subsequently coupled with various substituted anilines using Pd(OAc)
2, xantphos, and Cs
2CO
3 in dioxane to furnish targets
99.
All derivatives were evaluated for their effect on the enzymatic activity of EGFR-WT and mutant EGFR-L858R/T790M/C797S and EGFR-L858R/T790M kinases using the ADP-Glo Kinase Kit. Osimertinib was employed as a positive control. One of the inhibitors, 100, was identified as the most favorable compound and strongly inhibited EGFR-L858R/T790M/C797S and EGFR-L858R/T790M activity with IC50 values of 5.51 nM and 33.35 nM, respectively. In addition, 100 exhibited stronger antiproliferative activity against NSCLC cells (H1975), expressing high levels of EGFR-L858R/T790M and Ba/F3-EGFR-L858R/T790M/C797S cells with IC50 values of 0.442 μM and 0.433 μM, respectively. Proliferation was inhibited by arresting the H1975 cells at the G2/M phase, promoting apoptosis of the cells, and reducing phosphorylation of EGFR and extracellular signal-related kinase 1/2 in a dose-dependent manner. The wound-healing assay data showed that H1975 migration and invasion abilities were effectively inhibited by 100 in a concentration-dependent manner. Compound 100 also expressed a 27-fold lower toxicity against normal liver cells, indicating an improved dosage safety margin. The results further suggest that this compound could be used as a competitive ATP inhibitor, as well as an allosteric inhibitor of EGFR-L858R/T790M/C797S.
A patent developed by Lee et al. featured a lung cancer subtype which is an EGFR mutation positive for NSCLC [
49]. More than 50% of NSCLC patients have EGFR activating mutations. Currently, third-generation EGFR-TKIs are being explored to overcome this resistance. Osimertinib is a powerful inhibitor that suppresses EGFR mutations and T790M resistant mutations, but it causes ineffective binding and subsequent C797S resistance in NSCLC patients. When Osimertinib was administered as a front-line therapy, the most common resistance mechanisms proved to be the C797S mutation (7%) and mesenchymal epithelial transition amplification (15%) [
50]. The next-generation EGFR compounds would need to inhibit Dell9/T790M/C797S, L858R/T790M/C797S, Dell9/C797S, and L858R/C797S, and be highly selective versus EGFR-WT to avoid adverse effects. The work in this patent focused on an unmet need, to develop a next-generation TKI targeting both C797S triple and double mutants. It was imperative to create a selective, next-generation inhibitor for NSCLC patients with advanced or metastatic diseases carrying Dell9/T790M/C797S, L858R/T790M/C797S, Dell9/C797S, or L858R/C797S mutations following second-line or upfront use of third-generation EGFR-TKIs.
The synthetic approach to these next-generation anticancer agents is depicted in
Scheme 14. Initially, amination of the commercial pyridine derivative
101 by S
NAr displacement of the C4 chloride using DIPEA in DMF at 90 °C provided
102. Subsequent exposure to Buchwald–Hartwig coupling conditions with pyrimidine derivative
103 using tris(dibenzylideneacetone)dipalladium(0) (Pd
2(dba)
3), xantphos, and Cs
2CO
3 in dioxane provided products
104.
The enzymatic biochemical assays for the EGFR kinases were reported in the patent. The assays were conducted and reported for the EGFR-WT, double mutants Dell9/C797S and L858R/C797S, and triple mutants Dell9/T790M/C797S and L858R/T790M/C797S. There were many promising compounds that had IC50 values in the 0.1–100 nM range but no further biological data were reported.
A patent by the Dai group disclosed the use of pyrimidines with deuterated substituents to target cyclin-dependent kinases (CDKs) [
51]. CDKs are part of a subfamily of serine/threonine protein kinases which play a significant role in regulating cell cycle progression [
52]. They are essential cell cycle drivers, especially CDK2, which helps cells to transition from late G1 into S and G2 phases. CDK2 plays a prominent role in proliferative pathways, which are not important for normal cell proliferation but are essential for cancer cells [
52]. Selective CDK2 inhibitors might target tumors which are highly cyclin E1 and E2 expressive. Cyclin E1 is always overexpressed in human cancer. Cyclin E1 amplified ovarian cancer cell lines are sensitive to reagents that inhibit CDK2 activity or decrease cellular CDK2 protein. Some of the pyrimidine-based drug candidates in this patent specifically targeted CDK2 and offered selectivity over other kinases in treating patients with tumors.
A strategy by which to synthesize potential CDK2 inhibitors is shown in
Scheme 15. Compound
105 underwent a S
NAr reaction with deuterated 4-aminobenzenesulfonamide
106 in the presence of zinc chloride and TEA in DCM–
t-butanol to provide
107. Intermediate
107 was further reacted with lithium hexamethyldisilazide (LiHMDS)-derived alkoxide from tetrahydro-2
H-pyran-4-ol
108 in tetrahydrofuran (THF) to afford
109. Finally, removal of the
p-methoxybenzyl (PMB) protecting group was carried out in the presence of 2,3-dichloro-5,6-dicyano-
p-benzoquinone (DDQ) in DCM and H
2O to furnish derivatives
110. Some derivatives without the deuterium are also reported in this patent using the same sequence.
The most promising compounds, 111–113, had IC50 = 1–10 nM for CDK2/cyclin E1 activity whereas for CDK1/cyclin B1 activity was nearly 10–20 times weaker offering only 20-fold selectivity. With respect to other isoforms of cyclin—CDK4, CDK6, CDK7, and CDK9—111–113 offered 100–1000-fold greater selectivity. The patent asserts that these compounds were evaluated against breast, ovarian, bladder, uterine, prostate, lung (including NSCLC, SCLC, squamous cell carcinoma or adenocarcinoma), esophageal, head and neck, colorectal, kidney (including renal cell carcinoma), liver (including hepatocellular carcinoma), pancreatic, stomach, and thyroid cancers. The patent further claims that these derivatives were tested for estrogen receptor-positive/hormone receptor-positive, HER2-negative, HER2-positive, triple negative, and inflammatory breast cancer, but few results are reported from these experiments.
As in the previous entry, Zhou et al. were involved in developing a drug scaffold targeting the CDKs [
53]. CDKs are important in many crucial processes, such as cell cycle and transcription, as well as communication, metabolism, and apoptosis. Deregulation of any stage of the cell cycle or transcription leads to apoptosis but, if uncorrected, can result in a series of diseases, such as cancer, neurodegenerative diseases (Alzheimer’s or Parkinson’s diseases), and stroke [
50]. CDK4/6 is considered a potential anticancer drug target. To date, three CDK4/6 inhibitors have been approved; however, there is still a gap between the clinical requirements and the approved drugs [
54]. Thus, selective and oral CDK4/6 inhibitors are urgently needed, particularly for monotherapy. This study investigated the interaction between Abemaciclib (see
Supplementary Materials) and human CDK6 using molecular dynamics simulations. Based on these modelling studies, a candidate compound was designed that was predicted to show a significant inhibitory effect on a human breast cancer cell line.
The strategy to prepare the designed model compound is outlined in
Scheme 16. Initially, Suzuki–Miyaura coupling of 2,4-dichloro-5-fluoropyridine (
59) with pyrazolo-pyridineboronate ester
114 in the presence of Pd(dppf)Cl
2 and K
2CO
3 in aqueous dioxane afforded intermediate
115. This was followed by Buchwald–Hartwig coupling with a 4-(4-isopropylpiperazin-1-yl)aniline (
116) under standard conditions, to furnish
117.
The inhibitory activity of 117 (C2213-A) was validated against CDK6 using a kinase profiling radiometric protein kinase assay. The IC50 value for 117 was 290 nM, comparable to the estimate of 238 nM for Abemaciclib targeting human CDK6/cyclin D3. The antiproliferative activity of 117 was significantly higher than Abemaciclib (positive control) with an IC50 = 2.95 ± 0.15 μM. The inhibitory activity of 117 was tested against MCF-7 cells as well as other breast cancer cell lines such as T-47D, MDA-MB-452 and MDA-MB-468 and showed a better inhibitory effect than the control. The CDK4/6 inhibition by 117 and the phosphorylation of retinoblastoma tumor suppressor were assessed by a Western blot assay on MDA-MB-231 cells. Compound 117 was found to block the CDK4/6/Rb/E2F signaling pathway in a dose-dependent manner after 24 h of incubation.
Zhang et al. have identified a new anticancer drug incorporating the pyrimidine scaffold that targets microtubules [
55]. Microtubules are essential structural components of the cytoskeleton and are composed of α- and β-tubulin heterodimers [
56]. Due to the polymerization dynamics of tubulin, microtubules are important targets for anticancer drugs known as microtubule-targeting agents (MTAs). A total of 7 binding sites on tubulin have been found including Paclitaxel (see
Supplementary Materials), Laulimalide, Colchicine (see
Supplementary Materials), Vinblastine, Maytansine, and Pironetin, as well as a 7th binding site. To date, no tubulin inhibitors targeting the colchicine binding site (CBS) have been specifically approved for clinical application. On the other hand, one CBS inhibitor, namely ABI (
118), has been reported to manifest nanomolar potency against multidrug resistant strains with significant in vivo antitumor efficacy [
57]. Despite the excellent biological activities, ABI analogs contain a ketone group between the imidazole and the C-ring which is a metabolic soft spot susceptible to reduction by liver microsomes. Osimertinib (
1), on the other hand, is an approved pyrimidine-containing anticancer drug for NSCLC [
58]. In this work, the authors designed the series of Osimertinib–ABI hybrids shown in
Figure 3 for use as MTAs to treat cancer.
The general synthetic approach to hybrids
119–
122 is shown in
Scheme 17. In
Scheme 17-I, construction of
119 involved Suzuki–Miyaura coupling between C4 of 2,4-dichloropyrimidine (
52) and a wide range of commercially available arylboronic acids to generate intermediates
123. S
NAr reaction of
123 with 3,4,5-trimethoxyaniline (
124) provided drug candidates
119. In
Scheme 17-II, independent Suzuki–Miyaura couplings were carried out between 3,4,5-trimethoxyphenylboronic acid (
125) and compounds
52 and 4,6-dichloropyrimidine (
127) to furnish intermediates
126 and
128. Each of these was further coupled with arylboronic acids to give 4-(3,4,5-trimethoxyphenyl)-2-arylpyrimidines
120 and 4-(3,4,5-trimethoxyphenyl)-6-arylpyrimidines
121, respectively. In
Scheme 17-III, aldol condensation of 1-(3,4,5-trimethoxyphenyl)ethan-1-one (
129) and a series of benzaldehyde derivatives yielded 1,3-diaryl-2-propen-1-ones (chalcones)
130, which were reacted with guanidine hydrochloride under basic conditions to produce a library of 2-amino-3,5-diarylpyrimidine derivatives
122.
A total of 43 pyrimidine analogs were synthesized and evaluated for their antiproliferative activity. Among these, prototype 131, bearing a fused 1,4-benzodioxane moiety, exhibited the best potency, inhibiting four cancer cell lines including A549–lung (IC50 = 0.80 ± 0.09 μM), HepG2–liver (IC50 = 0.11 ± 0.02 μM), U937–lymphoma (IC50 = 0.07 ± 0.01 μM), and Y79–retinoblastoma (IC50 = 0.10 ± 0.02 μM). Furthermore, 131 suppressed tubulin polymerization and disrupted the microtubule network of HepG2 cells. Molecular dynamics simulations suggested that 131 blocked the cell cycle at the G2/M phase and eventually induced HepG2 cell apoptosis by regulation of G2/M related protein expression of cyclin B1 and P21. Both scratch and transwell assays have indicated that this derivative inhibited migration and invasion of HepG2 cells in a dose-dependent manner. Overall, these results indicate that 131 has potential as a tubulin polymerization inhibitor targeting the CBS and merited further investigation.
MTAs are an important chemotherapeutic class of drugs that interfere with tubulin dynamics by disrupting the formation of the mitotic spindle, arresting cell cycles, and finally promoting apoptosis of tumor cells. An investigation by Wang et al. [
59] has demonstrated that, while microtubule disruption can interfere with cancer development, it can also affect normal cells, leading to two major toxicities: neutropenia and peripheral neuropathy in postmitotic neurons [
60]. Although achievements have been made in clinical treatment, toxicities still limit the utility of MTAs [
61]. The CBSs, located at the interface between α- and β-tubulin heterodimers [
62], effectively impact protein trafficking and could serve as a key entry point for anticancer agents. Evidence suggests that CBS inhibitors can overcome drug resistance mediated by P-glycoprotein (P-gp), multidrug resistance protein 1 (MRP1) and MRP2, and destroy the vascular networks that exist in tumor tissues serving as vascular damaging agents (VDAs). For these reasons, the CBS is an attractive target for the development of chemotherapeutic drugs, including those featured in their paper. The authors have identified a novel MTA skeleton which inhibits tubulin polymerization at 5 μM. The team further optimized this series of compounds by evaluating a structure–activity relationship (SAR) derived from an X-ray co-crystal with the target.
A concise synthesis of the required pyrimidine analogs is presented in
Scheme 18. A series of aromatic amines was prepared and reacted with 4,6-dichloropyrimidine (
127) using DIPEA in ethanol to produce
132. This was followed by a second nucleophilic substitution reaction with various alkyl and aromatic amines, which subsequently led to products
133.
Following optimization, lead molecule
134 expressed the highest antiproliferative potency against six different cancer cell lines, including SKOV-3–ovarian (EC
50 = 1.5 ± 0.2 nM), HepG2–liver (EC
50 = 1.8 ± 0.6 nM), MDA-MB-231–breast (EC
50 = 4.4 ± 0.6 nM), HeLa–cervical (EC
50 = 3.6 ± 0.3 nM), B16-F10–melanoma (EC
50 = 3.3 ± 0.1 nM), and A549–lung (EC
50 = 1.1 ± 0.2 nM). This compound also exhibited more potent antiproliferative activities than Colchicine and Paclitaxel against the paclitaxel-resistant ovarian cancer cell line A2780/T and its parental cell line A2780, indicating that
134 could overcome P-gp-mediated paclitaxel resistance in vitro. The compound also showed equal activity against lung tumors A549-WT and low EGFR expression A549, proving that EGFR inhibition was not the major reason for the antitumor activity. The PK results show that
134 can be absorbed rapidly from the intestine with t
1/2 = 0.22 ± 0.02 h (see
Table 4). The lead had a slightly high, but acceptable, CL of 69.84 ± 4.97 mL/min/kg and an AUC of 239.43 ± 16.39 ng/mL·h. These results establish that
134 has acceptable pharmacokinetic properties, and therefore, is suitable for further development.
Abdel-Aal et al. have developed anticancer compounds specifically targeting the tubulins [
62]. Though anticancer drugs are already in place for this target, the authors sought to address the poor oral bioavailability and the multidrug resistance of current tubulin drugs. This work focused on the modification of the Combretastatin and Phenstatin drug scaffolds. Chalcones can be simply viewed as keto stilbenes, mimicking both Combretastatin and Phenstatin. Various modifications of the 1,3-diaryl scaffold were developed without affecting their tubulin inhibitory activity, including phenoxy substitution and replacement with heterocyclic rings [
63]. The authors developed lipidated 4,6-diarylpyrimidines as tubulin polymerization inhibitors (or antiproliferative agents) which improved the interaction in the hydrophobic pocket and enhanced their physiochemical properties and cell penetration. The pyrimidine moiety in this series of compounds offered extra hydrophilic interactions and rigidity relative to the propanone scaffold, which may enhance tubulin binding.
The syntheses of molecules for this study are depicted in
Scheme 19. The plan targeted lipidated chalcones, which were prepared using known condensation chemistry [
64]. The final lipidated 4,6-diarylpyrimidines were prepared by refluxing long-chain alkoxy-substituted chalcones
135 with urea, thiourea, or guanidine carbonate in alkaline medium to produce the required drug candidates
136–
138.
Eighteen chalcones and their lipidated pyrimidine derivatives were designed and synthesized as tubulin polymerization inhibitors. In general, the synthetic pyrimidine derivatives had improved antiproliferative activity over the corresponding chalcones against the MCF-7 cancer cell line. The pyrimidin-2-amine 139 showed dual antiproliferative activity against MCF-7–breast (IC50 = 10.95 μM) and HepG2–liver (IC50 = 11.93 μM) cell lines, induced apoptosis and cell cycle arrest, and displayed tubulin inhibitory activity against MCF-7 at low micromolar concentration. The compound also induced S-phase cell cycle arrest and apoptosis in MCF-7 cells with a tubulin IC50 = 9.7 μM. These findings established 139 as an anticancer lead worthy of further optimization and development.
A patent by Boeckman et al. describes inhibitors of histone H3K27 demethylase JMJD3 [
65]. The Jumonji C (JMJC) domain, containing proteins which include histone H3K27, plays a significant role in tumorigenesis and has been identified as a key target for anti-cancer agents [
66]. The patent highlights the critical role of Jumonji kinases and inhibitors of H3K27 to target diffuse intrinsic pontine glioma (DIPG), which is the most frequent brain stem tumor in pediatrics and has a survival rate of 9–12 months from diagnosis [
67]. There are no surgical options for this brain stem tumor and conventional chemotherapy is used solely to alleviate pain. Due to this issue, an efficacious therapeutic agent is needed for these DIPG patients. DIPG is uniquely dependent on the H3K27 mutation for cancer initiation/maintenance and is detected in more than 80% of patients. However, more than 250 clinical trials have been executed on this target without much success.
The synthesis of prospective targets, shown in
Scheme 20, started with 2-cyanopyridine (
140), which was converted to picolinimidamide hydrochloride (
141) with ammonium chloride (NH
4Cl) in the presence of HCl in ethanol and DCM. Hydrochloride
141 was cyclized with diethyl malonate using sodium ethoxide in ethanol to provide dihydroxypyrimidine
142, which was transformed to the corresponding dichloro derivative
143 using POCl
3. Subsequent S
NAr reaction of
143 with amine
144, promoted by DIPEA at reflux, provided
145 [
68]. Finally,
145 was reacted with various aliphatic amino alcohols to generate the desired model compounds
146, which were evaluated for biological activity
. Some of the final alcohols employed prodrug approaches as part of this screening.
Synthesized derivative
147 (UR-8) demonstrated selective cytotoxic activity against human DIPG-K27M cells (IC
50 = 4–6 μM) in vitro and was apparently transported to the brain due to its in vivo stability. In a mouse study, prototype
147 showed a favorable biodistribution in the brain stem compared with a competitor compound, GSK-J1. The concentration of
147 was found to be around 4455 ± 1576 ng/mL in serum and around 409.5 ± 243.9 ng/mL in the brain stem. Extraction of brain stem tissue from mice treated with
147 followed by HPLC assay revealed 8.77 ± 2.37% of
147 in this tissue. A similar experiment using GSK-J1 (see
Supplementary Materials) detected no significant amount of the competitor compound in brain stem tissue. Further data indicate that
147 was likely active in its original form and therefore this subclass of inhibitors offers high potential for clinical application. The compound also inhibited tumor growth and prolonged survival rates in mice with human DIPG xenografts. To determine the in vivo antitumor activity of this analog, the mice were implanted with DIPG-SF8628 cells in the brain stem and treated with 100 mg/kg of
147 for 10 consecutive days. This experiment confirmed that
147 outperformed other current drugs for this tumor.
Ling et al. have developed an inhibitor for acute myeloid leukemia (AML), which is a life-threatening malignancy with a 5-year survival rate. This cancer is characterized by its disruption of hematopoietic progenitor cell differentiation and proliferation [
68]. AML treatment, which includes chemotherapy, does not exhibit long-term efficacy, and 70% of people do not survive beyond 1 year [
69]. Some of the known chemotherapeutic drugs, such as Cytarabine (see
Supplementary Materials) and Daunorubicin (see
Supplementary Materials), have already encountered drug resistance in patients. Bruton’s tyrosine kinase (BTK), a member of the TEC kinase family, plays a critical role in multiple signaling pathways and significantly impacts proliferation, survival, and differentiation of B-lineage and myeloid cells [
70]. BTK is highly expressed and activated in more than 90% of AML patients, and, thus, could offer a potential strategy for treatment. These researchers also specified interest in a second target, namely the FMS-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3), which is expressed in most AML cell lines. The authors resolved to seek a dual inhibitor for these two kinase targets to address the issue of drug resistance.
The synthesis of possible BTK/FLT3 dual inhibitors is shown in
Scheme 21. Two sequential S
NAr reactions of 2,4-dichloro-5-fluoropyrimidine (
59), the first, at C4 by aniline esters
148 using DIPEA in isopropanol at 80 °C, gave
149, while the second, at C2 by aniline
150 in the presence of TFA in butanol, produced
151. Subsequently, the ester group in
151 was converted to hydroxamic acid with hydroxylamine hydrochloride and KOH in methanol to afford the final targets
152.
Some of the compounds synthesized as BTK/FLT3 dual inhibitors exhibited IC
50 values at low nanomolar levels. Among these dual inhibitors,
153 exhibited activity against FLT3/D835Y mutant cells with single digit nanomolar potency (IC
50 = 5.9 ± 0.1 nM). This inhibitor showed powerful antiproliferative activity against AML cells and inhibited the growth of other leukemia cells: MV-4-11 (IC
50 = 0.29 ± 0.02 nM) Molm13 (IC
50 = 0.45 ± 0.03 nM), K562 (IC
50 = 73 ± 13 nM), Molt4 (IC
50 = 1.4 ± 0.3 nM), and THP1 (IC
50 = 37 ± 5 nM) which are all BTK and FLT3 positive. Additionally, compound
153 effectively induced apoptosis and upregulated proapoptotic protein levels in MV-4-11 cells in a dose-dependent manner. Finally,
153 effectively suppressed the growth of MV-4-11 cells in the xenograft tumor model with a 20 mg/kg intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection and showed an antitumor effect, like Sorafenib (20 mg/kg, see
Supplementary Materials)), with no significant toxicity.
Yang et al. undertook a study to develop a drug for prostate cancer (PCa), which is a major threat to male health and results in a high mortality rate worldwide [
71]. Hormonal therapies for PCa play a major role by decreasing androgen levels. However, once resistance develops in hormonal therapies, it renders this approach unusable, so there is an urgent need to develop alternative drugs for PCa [
72]. In this work, the Yang group focused on dual-specificity tyrosine phosphorylation-regulated kinases (DYRKs), which belong to the CMGC kinase family, where DYRK2 plays an important role in cell proliferation, apoptosis, and migration. By downregulating DYRK2, PCa is suppressed which makes this a prominent target for inhibition [
73].
The synthetic route to compounds needed for this program is shown in
Scheme 22. Bromobenzothiazole
154 was coupled with bis(pinacolato)diboron (
155) in the presence of Pd(dppf)Cl
2 and KOAc to generate boronate ester
156, which was further coupled with pyrimidine
59 using bis(triphenylphosphine)palladium(II) chloride ((PPh
3)
2PdCl
2) and K
2CO
3 in aqueous 1,2-dimethoxyethane (DME) to afford
157. Compound
157 underwent Buchwald–Hartwig coupling at C4 with various protected amines
158 to provide adducts that were deprotected with ethyl acetate-HCl in DCM to deliver targets
159 for biological evaluation.
The authors used structure-based virtual screening to develop these DYRK2 inhibitors of which the most potent was
160 with an IC
50 = 0.6 nM. This compound also elicited good inhibitory activity against proliferation and migration and promoted apoptosis on PCa cells. The ADME properties of
160 were presented along with a thermodynamic solubility of 29.5 mg/mL, a parallel artificial membrane permeation assay (PAMPA) value of log Pe = −5.98, and liver microsomal stability of ca. 16 mL/min/kg with t
1/2 = 78 min. There was no hERG inhibition with QPloghERG = −6.743 and the compound had an excellent LD
50 > 10,000 mg/kg. At a high concentration of 200 mg/kg, the compound displayed tumor growth inhibition better than Enzalutamide (see
Supplementary Materials), which was the positive control (100 mg/kg) in the PCa xenograft models. The mice in this study did not undergo any significant weight loss, suggesting that these compounds likely have a good safety profile.
Xie et al. have developed adenosine A
2A receptor (A
2AR) antagonists as a novel strategy for cancer immunotherapy [
74]. Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is an endogenous ligand that is widely distributed throughout the human body. ATP is involved in numerous functions, including cell growth, hearth rhythm, immune function, sleep regulation and angiogenesis. Though there are four subtypes of adenosine receptor, only A
2AR has been sufficiently investigated to attract much attention as a potential drug target for cancer and various inflammatory and neurodegenerative diseases [
75]. These researchers sought to use this A
2AR strategy to develop a treatment for colon cancer.
The synthetic route to pyrimidine derivatives for this investigation is shown in
Scheme 23. The synthesis leveraged two consecutive Suzuki–Miyaura couplings to 2-amino-4,6-dichloropyrimidines
161, the first with arylboronate esters
162 to afford intermediate
163 and the second with various methyl protected pyridinones
164 to yield two sets of pyridine derivatives,
165 and
166. Demethylation of the pyridine moieties on these structures using HBr, and subsequent
N-alkylation afforded drug candidates
167 and
168.
Evaluations based on SAR and ADME properties led to compound
169 with improved potency (IC
50 = 29 nM vs. A
2AR) and better mouse liver microsomal metabolic stability (t
1/2 = 86 min). The compound expressed preferential activity against A
2AR over A
1R, A
2BR, and A
3R (>100-fold selectivity, IC
50 > 3 μM), and the compound demonstrated good oral bioavailability in mice. Compound
169 showed excellent anticancer activity, with a total growth inhibition of 56.0% and good safety characteristics in the mouse MC38 colon cancer model at an oral dose of 100 mg/kg. The PK of this drug candidate was assessed in mice following i.v. (2 mg/kg) and p.o. (10 mg/kg) administration to C57BL/6 mice (n = 3 peer groups), and the results are shown in
Table 5. The oral bioavailability (F) of compound
169 in mice was excellent (86.1%), and the compound had a plasma protein binding ratio of 98.6%. No significant body weight loss was observed in experimental mice, indicating that compound
169 was well tolerated at the given dosage. With these encouraging results, the anticancer agent
169 with an appended pyridinone moiety was deemed an excellent prospect for further refinement as an immunotherapeutic.
Huang et al. actuated a study to develop a hematopoietic progenitor inhibitor (HPK1) as a cancer immunotherapy [
76]. HPK1 is a mitogen-activated kinase 1 (MAP4K1), a cytosolic STE20 serine/threonine kinase from the germinal kinase family which is highly expressed in immune populations, including T cells, B cells, and dendritic cells [
77]. Recent evidence in this field suggests that HPK1 activation can significantly limit the intensity and duration of T-cell receptor signaling, resulting in cell dysfunction. Their results demonstrate that loss of HPK1 kinase function can increase cytokine secretion and enhance T cell signaling, virus clearance, and tumor inhibition. Thus, HPK1 has potential as a novel and effective target for cancer immune response enhancement.
In this work, rational design, synthesis, and SAR exploration were carried out for novel 2,4-disubstituted pyrimidine derivatives as potent HPK1 inhibitors by a scaffold hopping (heterocycle replacement) approach. The design of this compound was based on a reverse indazole derivative discovered by Merck, and which demonstrated highly potent and selective inhibition of HPK1 [
78]. The authors used this scaffold hopping strategy for drug design and diversification of chemotypes to identify pyrimidines as alternatives for indazole rings.
Scheme 24-I summarizes the preparation of one subset of target molecules. Initially, 2-chloro-4-aminopyrimidine (
170) was condensed with 5-fluoro-2-morpholinobenzoic acid (
171) in the presence of
O-(7-azabenzotriazol-1-yl)-
N,
N,
N′,
N′-tetramethyluronium hexafluorophosphate (HATU) and DIPEA in THF to afford
172. Amide
172 underwent Suzuki–Miyaura coupling with arylboronic acids/aryl(pinacolato)boronate esters in the presence of Pd(dppf)Cl
2 and K
2CO
3 in dioxane to provide
173. Access to the second subset of compounds, outlined in
Scheme 24-II, arose from Suzuki coupling of 2-chloropyrimidine-4-carboxylic acid (
174) with 2-fluoro-6-methoxyphenylboronic acid (
175) in the presence of Pd(dppf)Cl
2 and K
2CO
3 in aqueous dioxane to give
176. Finally, linkage of various anilines to
176 using HATU and DIPEA in THF furnished amides
177.
Upon screening, the synthetic 2,4-disubstituted pyrimidines proved to be powerful and selective HPK1 inhibitors. The most promising compound,
178 (HMC-H8), potently inhibited HPK1 with an IC
50 = 1.11 nM. The selectivity profile demonstrated that
178 exhibited good target differentiation and moderate preference against T-cell receptor-related targets such as lymphocyte-specific protein tyrosine kinase, germinal center kinase and protein kinase C-θ. In addition, the interleukin-2 (IL-2) and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) stimulation assay indicated that
178 actuated cytokine reproduction in a dose dependent manner. Notably, the reversal of immunosuppression evaluation revealed that
178 effectively restored IL-2 production, with up to 2.5 times greater increase in the IL-2 level over dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO) treatment. The ADME properties for
178 demonstrated that the compound does not have significant CYP450 inhibition in human liver microsomes at 10 μM. The compound has low to moderate intrinsic clearance (CL
int) = 24.37 L/min/mg in a human liver microsomal stability assay. A single PK was conducted for compound
178 on Sprague–Dawley rats (190–200 g, n = 3 peer groups) with an i.v. of 1 mg/kg and a p.o. of 10 mg/kg, and the results are summarized in
Table 6. Based on the data from the table, the compound appeared to have high clearance after both i.v. and p.o. administration. Finally, the compound has a very good C
max and AUC with a bioavailability (F) of 15.05%.
A patent by Ding et al. synthesized a class of kinesin family member 18A (KIF18A) inhibitors specifically to treat cancer [
79]. Various kinases and kinesins are responsible for division in normal cells and cancer cells. The KIF18A gene belongs to the kinesin-8 subfamily and is a plus-end oriented motor. KIF18A is thought to affect the dynamics of the plus ends of centromere microtubules to control correct chromosome positioning and spindle tension. Depletion of human KIF18A in longer spindles increases chromosome oscillations in the metaphase of HeLa cervical cancer cells and activation of the mitotic spindle assembly checkpoint. KIF18A appears to be a viable target for cancer therapy. KIF18A has been overexpressed in various cancers, including, but not limited to, colon, breast, lung, pancreatic, prostate, bladder, head and neck, cervical, and ovarian cancers. Furthermore, in cancer cells, gene deletion, knockout, or KIF18A inhibition affects the mitotic spindle body device. Inhibition of KIF18A has been found to induce mitotic cell arrest, a known weakness that can be facilitated by apoptosis, mitotic catastrophe, or heterogeneously driven lethality following mitotic slippage in interphase mitotic cell death [
80].
The preparation of drug candidates for this investigation is shown in
Scheme 25. Initial S
NAr of 2-chloro-4-methyl-6-aminopyrimidine (
179) with 4,4-difluoropiperidine (
180) in the presence of DIPEA in 1-methyl-2-pyrrolidinone (NMP) at 140 °C produced adduct
181. Derivative
181 was condensed with three different synthesized acids to give the final pyrimidinamide derivatives
182. There were only three compounds reported in this patent.
The patent did not elaborate on the biological activity of the compounds but rather reported the IC50 values for the pyrimidinamide derivatives. The IC50 values for the enzymatic inhibition of KIF18A claimed for the three derivatives ranged from 27–120 nM. However, no specific data were presented.
A patent filed by Hergenrother and Kelly focused on metastatic melanoma, a cancer that readily spreads beyond its original location to other parts of the body [
81]. This cancer results from genetic mutation and environmental factors. v-Raf murine sarcoma viral oncogene homolog B (BRAF) inhibitors are drugs that can shrink the growth of metastatic melanoma in patients whose tumors have a BRAF mutation. BRAF mutations are found in more than half of patients diagnosed with cutaneous melanoma. In BRAF-mutated melanoma, the BRAF kinase becomes hyperactivated, resulting in elevated cell proliferation and survival. The BRAF inhibitors Vemurafenib (
183), Encorafenib (
184) and Dabrafenib (
185) are used in patients with BRAF-mutated melanoma. These inhibitors specifically target BRAF kinase and thus interfere with the mitogen-activated protein kinase signaling pathway that regulates the proliferation and survival of melanoma cells [
82]. In this study, a new BRAF inhibitor, Everafenib-CO
2H (
187), was envisioned by combining the structural features of
183–
185 to reduce P-gp efflux propensity as well as to enhance brain penetration and activity in challenging intracranial mouse model melanoma (
Figure 4).
The synthesis of
187 is illustrated in
Scheme 26. In the first step, 3-amino-5-chloro-2-fluorobenzoic acid (
188) was esterified to
189 using methanol and thionyl chloride. Ester
189 underwent reaction with propanesulfonyl chloride (
190) using pyridine in DCM to afford the sulfonamide derivative
191 which was subsequently treated with the LiHMDS-derived anion of 2-chloro-4-methylpyrimidine (
192) to provide
193. Benzylic bromination of
193 and treatment with 2,2-dimethylpropanethioamide (
194) resulted in cyclization to provide thiazole
195. Compound
195 was then subjected to a S
NAr reaction with methyl 5-aminopentanoate hydrochloride (
196) in the presence of DIPEA in
N,
N-dimethylacetamide (DMA) under microwave irradiation to generate
197. Finally, hydrolysis of
197 using LiOH furnished acid
187.
The biological properties of Everafenib–CO
2H are summarized in
Table 7. The compound displayed a similar potency in A375–human melanoma cells when compared with Dabrafenib. In cell permeability assays (
Table 8), apparent permeability (P
app A-B) is like that of Dabrafenib, but P
app B-A is lower, which leads to an improved efflux ratio of 1.17 ± 0.22.
Work by De Vivo et al. highlighted the targeted cell division cycle GTPases (CDC42, RHOJ, and RHOQ), which are small guanosine triphosphate (GTP)-binding proteins that are known to regulate tumor growth, angiogenesis, metastasis, and cell resistance to targeted therapies [
83]. CDC42 GTPases are essential molecular switches within the cell for which their active/inactive state depends on whether they are bound to GTP or guanosine diphosphate. When CDC42 GTPases are bound to GTP, the former change their structural conformation, allowing protein surface interactions that are complementary to their downstream effectors [
84]. These include, but are not limited to, p21-activated protein kinases (PAKs). Notably, PAKs are known to be involved in invasion, migration, and oncogenic transformation. Many groups have sought to design small molecules that inhibit PAK kinases by targeting the large and flexible ATP binding pocket in the kinase domain or by targeting a large auto-inhibitory region that is observed in group I PAKs (PAK1, 2, and 3). However, the developed agents have failed to reach phase 2 due to their poor selectivity. For example, existing PAK inhibitors act on multiple isoforms of PAKs, including PAK2, which is thought to induce cardiotoxicity with a narrow therapeutic window. Potential modifications to GTPase inhibitors considered by the De Vivo team are summarized on the generalized structure in
Figure 5.
The synthetic plan for this work is delineated in
Scheme 27. In
Scheme 27-I, 2,4,6-trichloropyrimidine (
198) underwent a Suzuki–Miyaura coupling with phenylboronic acid (
199) under standard conditions to afford
200. Subsequent S
NAr reaction with various substituted anilines
201 in the presence of LiHMDS in THF at −60 °C provided intermediates
202. Suzuki coupling of
202 with
203 gave cyclic alkene
204 which was hydrogenated in the presence of ammonium formate and Pd(OH)
2/C or triethylsilane with Pd/C to give
205. When X =
N-Boc, the amine
205 was deprotected with 4 M HCl in dioxane to yield
206. In
Scheme 27-II, amine
207 was condensed with isobutyric acid in the presence of HATU and DIPEA in DMF to afford amide
208. Alkylation of
207 with 1-bromo-2-methoxyethane in the presence of DIPEA in ACN at 60 °C furnished ether
209.
Based on the recent discovery of lead compound
210, which showed anticancer activity in vivo, the authors expanded this new chemical class of CDC42/RHOJ inhibitors. Importantly, they identified and characterized two back-up compounds, namely,
211 and
212, derived from a SAR study with ~30 close analogs bearing different substituents on the pyrimidine or triazine core. The most potent IC
50 values were observed from
211 against five different melanoma cell lines, including SKM28 (IC
50 = 6.1 µM), SKMeI3 (IC
50 = 4.6 µM), WM3248 (IC
50 = 9.3 µM), A375 (IC
50 = 5.1 µM), and SW480 (IC
50 = 5.9 µM). Compound
211 also had good kinetic solubility (168 µM), a t
1/2 > 120 min in plasma and acceptable microsomal stability (t
1/2 = 45 min). The PK profile for compound
211 is shown in
Table 9.
Back-up compounds 211 and 212 have also displayed stable binding in the target pocket via molecular dynamics simulations and favorable PK profiles comparable to 210. Notably, the authors also measured the in vivo efficacy of the two lead compounds 211 and 212, with analog 211 exhibiting a significant ability to inhibit tumor growth in patient-derived xenografts in vivo, similar to lead compound 210.
Gray et al. have investigated inhibitors of the Hippo pathway, an important, evolutionarily conserved signaling cascade pathway with >30 components and which play a crucial role in organ size control, tissue homeostasis, stem cell renewal, cell proliferation, angiogenesis, and tumorigenesis [
85]. Dysregulation of the Hippo pathway through merlin neurofibromin-2 loss, large tumor suppressor kinase 1 fusion, yes-associated protein (YAP) and transcriptional co-activator with PDZ-binding (TAZ) fusions, and YAP/TAZ amplification have been linked to the occurrence and progression of tumor malignancies in mesothelioma, meningioma, lung cancer, liver cancer, and other solid tumors [
86]. Although the Hippo pathway has significant therapeutic potential, direct targeting of this cascade has been difficult. Thus, instead of directly targeting Hippo, the authors employed a reversible post-translational palmitoylation of the transcriptional enhanced associate domain (TEAD). Hyperactivation of TEAD–YAP/TAZ leads to human cancers and is associated with cancer cell proliferation, survival, and immune evasion. Therefore, targeting the TEAD–YAP/TAZ complex has emerged as an attractive therapeutic approach.
The synthesis of potential inhibitors for this work is shown in
Scheme 28-I. S
NAr reaction of amino ether
213 with 2-chloropyrimidine (
214) in the presence of DIPEA in butanol at 70 °C produced amino ethers
215. These intermediates were subsequently Boc deprotected and reacted with acryloyl chloride and TEA or condensed with acrylic acid to give amides
216. In
Scheme 28-II, a 7-membered ring diamine
217 was reacted with
214 using DIPEA in DMSO at 90 °C to provide
218. Intermediate
218 underwent the same amide formation with acryloyl chloride to afford target
219.
Time-resolved fluorescence energy transfer and TEAD reporter assays in this work demonstrated that the overall Y-shaped scaffold improved the potency of the compounds to an IC50 < 50 nM. The results suggest that selectivity could be achieved between TEAD isoforms due to modifications in different parts of the ring. Optimization of the chemistry on this series of compounds resulted in the development of a potent pan-TEAD inhibitor 220 (MYF-03-176). This structure exhibited potent inhibition of TEAD transcription with an IC50 = 17 ± 5 nM and significantly inhibited TEAD-regulated gene expression and proliferation of the cell lines with TEAD dependence, including those derived from mesothelioma and liposarcoma. Compound 220 also expressed the best antiproliferation activity on both the 94T778–liposarcoma (IC50 = 40 nM) and NCI-H226–squamous cell carcinoma (IC50 = 24 nM) cell lines.
A patent invention by Yu et al. sought to use small molecule pyrimidine derivatives to mitigate proliferative disorders caused by the expression of various kinases [
87]. The required compounds would need to inhibit the growth of wild tumor beads with high kinase expression and tumor cell lines with corresponding kinase mutations. These proliferative disorders include rearranged transfection (RET), glial-derived neurotrophic factor (GDNF), platelet-derived growth factor receptor (PDGFR), and vascular endothelial growth factor receptor (VEGFR). Kinase-derived RET is a neuronal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase and a transmembrane glycoprotein. The proto-oncogene, located on chromosome 10, is expressed during the embryonic stage, plays an important role in the development of the kidney and enteric nervous system, and is also critical in the homeostasis of neurons, neuroendocrine cells, hematopoietic tissue, and male germ cells [
88]. These RET kinase inhibitors may find use in the treatment of cancer and gastrointestinal disorders. The growth of solid tumors is highly dependent on vascular proliferation, especially PDGFR and VEGFR. These are the main mediators of angiogenesis and act as two indicators of the angiogenic potential of human gliomas. Neurturin and persephin are ligands belonging to the GNDF family (GFLs). GFLs usually bind to the GDNF family receptor α (GFRa), and the formed GFL–GFRa complexes mediate the self-dimerization of RET proteins, causing trans-autophosphorylation of tyrosine in the intracellular domain. This complex also recruits related adapter proteins and activates the cascade reaction of signal transduction such as cell proliferation and related signaling pathways that include mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK), phosphoinositide 3-kinase (PI3K), Janus kinase signal transducer and activator of transcription (JAK-STAT), protein kinase A (PKA), and protein kinase C (PKC). Thus, the patent sought a small molecule inhibitor to block these kinases in order to restrict the proliferation of cancer cells.
A route to small molecule kinase inhibitors for this project is outlined in
Scheme 29. Sandmeyer reaction of 2-amino-4-chloropyrimidine derivatives
221 using tert-butylnitrite and diiodomethane in ACN solvent afforded iodopyrimidines
222. Intermediates
222 underwent a S
NAr reaction with various amines and DIPEA to form
223. Anilinic amines
223 were Boc-protected to give
224 and subjected to Heck coupling with methyl acrylate using Pd(OAc)
2 and TEA in ACN to give
225. Acrylic esters
225 were hydrolyzed to acid
226 using LiOH and condensed with another set of amines using standard conditions to give amides
227. Final Boc deprotection of
227 with TFA in DCM delivered the required drug candidates
228.
Compounds 228 were evaluated as inhibitors of WT and mutant RET kinases, namely RET-V804M and RET-V804L. Several compounds recorded potencies ranging from 1 nM–1 μM in these assays. Compound 229 exhibited the best activity on two cell lines, TT–human thyroid and KM12–human colon adenocarcinoma, with IC50 values of 22 nM and 1.16 nM, respectively. Prototype 229 also showed inhibitory activity toward KIF5B-RET fusion (IC50 = 22 nM) and CCDC6-RET fusion cell lines (no IC50 given) which were developed to establish the antitumor activity. Most compounds tested on these cell lines showed IC50 values between 20 nM and 1 μM. The antitumor activity was determined by a pharmacodynamic model of human cancer in BALB/c nude mice with a xenograft tumor derived from the TT cell line. Compound 229 gave tumor shrinkage of close to 80% at a dose of 40 mg/kg thereby exhibiting a robust anti-tumor effect. Finally, the mice showed no significant change in body weight which signified a good tolerance for the compound.
Chen et al. reported the synthesis of inhibitors toward salt-inducible kinases (SIKs), intracellular serine/threonine kinases which belong to the adenosine monophosphate activated (AMPK) superfamily [
89]. The important role of SIKs is to act as molecular switches to regulate the transformation of macrophages (M1/M2) by phosphorylating CREB regulated transcription co-activator 3 (CRTC3) and to control its localization by activating the CRTC3 gene [
90]. Some of the SIKs are involved in tumor cell resistance to cell-mediated immune responses and in resistance to tumor necrosis factor. In this work, the authors were focused on improving the ADME and pharmacokinetic properties of a known SIK inhibitor, HG-9-91-01 (see
Supplementary Materials), which suffered from poor drug properties, including rapid clearance, low in vivo exposure, and high plasma protein binding [
91]. To overcome these deficiencies, the authors sought to hybridize Dasatinib (see
Supplementary Materials) and HG-9-91-01 to optimize the drug properties.
The syntheses of prospective drug molecules for this study are shown in
Scheme 30. The starting 2,4-dichloropyrimidine ester
230 underwent C4 substitution with various alkyl amines in the presence of TEA in ACN to afford
231 which was subsequently hydrolyzed with LiOH in aqueous THF to form
232. Acids
232 were further transformed to their acid chlorides which reacted with substituted benzylamines and 2,6-dimethylaniline to provide amides
233 and
235, respectively. Finally, these compounds underwent C2 S
NAr reaction with a series of anilines in AcOH to furnish the desired derivatives
234 and
236.
Once these compounds were available, the pharmacokinetic profiles were evaluated. Each compound showed a modest improvement with a longer half-life, lower clearance and enhanced metabolic stability to human liver microsomes (t
1/2 = 120 min). The plasma protein binding for the most promising structure,
237, was ca. 79.4%, compared with >99% for HG-9-91-01. In addition to demonstrating good SIK inhibitory activity,
237 had medium selectivity among the subtypes of SIKs and exhibited excellent anti-inflammatory properties in a dextran sulfate sodium-induced colitis model. The in vitro anti-inflammation activity evaluation by cell-based phenotypes for
237 showed SIK inhibition via up-regulated IL-10 and reduced IL-12 at both the gene and protein level. The macrophage markers were also observed in LIGHT, SPHK1 and Arginase 1 proteins for the best compound synthesized. The PK profile of
237 is condensed in
Table 10.
A patent disclosure from Marseglia et al. also imagined inhibitors targeting SIK3 [
92]. SIK3 is involved in tumor cell resistance to cell-mediated immune responses, specifically, tumor cell resistance to tumor necrosis factor. Recent reports have demonstrated that SIK3 expression regulates transforming growth factor-β mediated transcriptional activity and apoptosis [
93].
The synthesis of a drug candidate for this study is shown in
Scheme 31. S
NAr reaction of 4,6-dichloro-2-methylpyrimidine (
17) by ethyl 2-aminothiazole-5-carboxylate (
238) in the presence Cs
2CO
3 in DMF furnished aminothiazole-pyrimidine
239. A second S
NAr reaction of
239 with 4-methylpiperazine using DIPEA in butanol produced
240, which was saponified to acid
241. Amidification of
241 with 3-aminothiophene in the presence of chloro-
N,
N,
N′,
N′-tetramethylformamidinium hexafluorophosphate (TCFH) and DIPEA in ACN generated amide
243.
Model compound
243 inhibited both SIK2 and SIK3 with IC
50 values of ca. 10 and 20 nM, respectively. The compound also exhibited significant inhibition of (1) nuclear factor kappa-light chain enhancer of activated B cells (NF-κB) in MC38–colon and EMT6–epithelial carcinoma cells and (2) histone deacetylase 4 phosphorylation. Agent
243 had a reasonable ADME profile, with a human liver microsomal stability of 131 μL/min/mg and a human hepatocyte stability of 58 μL/min/mg. Compound
243 also demonstrated good plasma exposure with 1% unbound and a recovery of 92% after 4 h. Moreover,
243 showed good permeability with Madin Darby canine kidney MDR1 cells with a P
app A>B of ca. 5 × 10
−6 cm/s. However, the efflux ratio was nearly 26, suggesting that the compound was an efflux substrate. Compound
243 presented a good PK profile, exhibiting low clearance with a good AUC following p.o. administration of 30 mg/kg (
Table 11).
Finally, treatment of established tumors (MC38–colon, EMT6–epithelial) in different syngeneic tumor mouse models with 243 resulted in significant tumor growth inhibition in a monotherapy protocol. Compound 243 showed tumor shrinkage of 74% with a 25 mg/kg twice daily dosing and a body weight increase of 16.8%, which was comparable or even superior to anti-programmed cell death-1 treatment alone. Furthermore, immune cell profiling of treated mice showed a significant infiltration of activated T cells, along with excellent reduction in immunosuppressive regulatory T cells and M2 tumor-associated microphages.
5. Pyrimidine-Based Drugs for the Treatment of Neurological Disorders
A patent by the Defossa team focused on inflammatory responses to harmful stimuli, such as the invasion of pathogens and tissue damage [
102]. Chronic inflammation is an important underlying factor in many human diseases, such as neurodegeneration, rheumatoid arthritis, autoimmune and inflammatory diseases, and cancer. Receptor-interacting protein kinase 1 (RIPK1, UniProtKB Q13546) is a key regulator of inflammation, apoptosis, and necroptosis. Receptor-interacting protein kinase 1 has an important role in modulating inflammatory responses mediated by NF-κΒ [
103]. Dysregulation of RIPK1 signaling can lead to excessive inflammation or cell death, and, conversely, inhibition of RIPK1 can be an effective therapy for chronic neurodegenerative diseases involving inflammation or cell death. RIPK1 inhibition has been identified as a promising target for different diseases, like rheumatoid arthritis, psoriasis, multiple sclerosis, and Alzheimer’s disease, and of inflammatory bowel diseases, such as Crohn’s disease or ulcerative colitis [
104]. Dihydropyrazoles and isoxazolidines as RIPK1 inhibitors are well known in phase II clinical trials for ulcerative colitis [
105].
The syntheses of prospective agents to treat these conditions are shown in
Scheme 35. Reaction of 4,6-dichloropyrimidine (
127) with the 4-piperidinecarboxylic ester hydrochloride
274 in the presence of DIPEA in butanol afforded C4-aminated intermediate
275. S
NAr reaction of
275 at C6 with imidazoles
276 and triazoles
278 using K
2CO
3 and Cs
2CO
3 in various solvents afforded
277 and
279. Compounds
279 were further transformed by saponification of the 4-piperidinyl ester to give
280 and condensation with the 3-arylisoxazoline derivative
281 to give
282. Incorporation of a pyrazole on the pyrimidine ring of
275 was achieved by Suzuki–Miyaura coupling with
283 to generate
284. On the other hand, a methyltriazole was added by reaction of
275 with hydrazine hydrate in isopropanol, followed by condensation with
N-(
E)-[(dimethylamino)methylidene]acetamide (
285) using catalytic
p-TsOH·H
2O in ethanol to afford
286.
The compounds were evaluated in the receptor-interacting protein kinase 1 (RIPK1) inhibition assay. The catalytic activity of RIPK1 was measured using an ADP-Glo Kinase Kit and the cellular assay was measured in U937–lymphoma cells for RIPK1 inhibition activity causing cell death. The patent spotlighted 20 compounds in both assays and the potency for most compounds ranged from 4–200 nM. Overall, compound 287 performed the best, having an IC50 = 9 nM in the RIPK1 kinase inhibition assay and an IC50 = 4 nM in the U937 cellular assay.
Hartz et al. sought to develop a drug for Alzheimer’s disease, which is a neurodegenerative disorder characterized by memory loss and cognitive impairment [
106]. As the disease progresses, it also causes deterioration in behavioral functions leading to communication problems, spatial disorientation, and changes in personality. More than 5.8 million Americans over the age of 65 currently live with Alzheimer’s disease [
107]. In this work, the authors targeted glucogen synthase kinase-3 (GSK-3) which is a proline-directed serine/threonine kinase that is widely distributed in the human body. GSK-3β is an important isoform of GSK-3 found in most areas of the brain. The most recent studies suggest that this kinase offers a therapeutic window wherein the GSK-3β inhibition that modulates key neuronal molecular targets can be achieved while avoiding mechanism-based β-catenin-driven effects [
108]. As a result of its multifaceted role, GSK-3 has been linked to numerous conditions, including Alzheimer’s disease, mood disorders and type 2 diabetes as well as cancer and myocardial disease.
The syntheses of candidate structures for this research are shown in
Scheme 36. In
Scheme 36-I, 2-aminopyrimidine-4-carboxylic acid (
288) was reacted with a set of 3-aminopyridines
289 in the presence of HATU with DIPEA in DCM or DMF to afford amides
290. One of the compounds prepared,
291, was further subjected to a Buchwald–Hartwig coupling with bromobenzene (
292) in the presence of Pd
2(dba)
3, xantphos, and Cs
2CO
3 in dioxane to provide targets
293.
Scheme 36-II employed the same reaction conditions as above, starting with 2-chloropyrimidine-4-carboxylic acid (
294) along with a different subset of 3-aminopyridines
295, to provide amides
296. Compounds
296 underwent amination either by a Buchwald–Hartwig coupling or by S
NAr reaction in NMP at 150 °C to furnish prototypes
297.
In this investigation, two highly potent pyrimidine-based GSK-3 inhibitors were discovered. Amides
298 and
299 displayed potent IC
50 values of 0.35 nM and 0.56 nM on GSK-3β and inhibition of p-tau with IC
50 values of 10 nM and 34 nM, respectively. However, both compounds also exhibited respective IC
50 values of 0.25 nM and 0.45 nM on GSK-3α, as this isoform has a 90% similarity to GSK-3β. Some of the ADME properties of
298 and
299 are summarized in
Table 13. PAMPA and Caco-2 assay results show that these compounds are highly permeable to membranes. Kinase selectivity assessment in the Ambit panel of 412 kinases indicated that analogs with an aromatic group at the 4-position of the pyridine exhibited excellent kinase discrimination. Both
298 and
299 showed high selectivity against CDK2 and CDK5 in a standard panel of kinases.
The PK properties of
298 and
299 are summarized in
Table 14. Both compounds had excellent oral bioavailability in a triple-transgenic mouse Alzheimer’s disease model with a good volume of distribution. The compound had low clearance and an average t
1/2. In vivo studies have demonstrated that these compounds were brain-penetrant GSK-3 inhibitors that significantly lowered tau phosphorylation. The results described herein may encourage further investigation of this class of GSK-3 inhibitors as a potential treatment for Alzheimer’s disease.
A recent patent disclosure by Kumaravel et al. describes the utilization of pyrimidine-based compounds to treat a wide variety of neurological disorders attributable to transactive response DNA binding protein-43 (TDP-43), such as immunoreactive pathology, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, myofibrillar myopathy, sporadic inclusion body myositis, dementia pugilistica, chronic traumatic encephalopathy, Alexander disease, progressive supranuclear palsy, corticobasal degeneration, and frontotemporal lobar degeneration [
109]. TDP-43 is an important nuclear DNA/RNA binding protein involved in RNA splicing. With pathological stress, TDP-43 translocates to the cytoplasm and aggregates into stress granules and related protein inclusions [
110]. These phenotypes are known to degrade motor neurons and are found in 97% of all ALS cases. These TDP-43 mutations promote aggregation and are linked to a higher risk of developing ALS, suggesting that protein misfolding and aggregation act as drivers of toxicity [
111]. In this invention, inhibitors of a Fyve-type zinc finger containing phosphoinositide kinase (PIKfyve) were prepared and studied in order to treat or prevent neurological disorders, such as the conditions enumerated above. The disclosure was based, in part, on the discovery that PIKfyve inhibition modulates TDP-43 aggregation in cells. Suppressing this aggregation exerts beneficial effects in patients suffering from neurological decline.
The synthetic work from this patent is outlined in
Scheme 37 and involves the construction of the pyrimidine core appended with a morpholine. Reaction of morpholine-4-carboximidamide hydrochloride (
300) with 2-methoxymalonate ester
301 in the presence of methanolic NaOMe provided
302. Dihydroxypyrimidine
302 was reacted with POCl
3 to give the dichloride
303 which served as the starting material for a variety of analogs. Initially,
303 was subjected to Suzuki coupling with boronate ester
304 with Pd(dppf)Cl
2 and Cs
2CO
3 to generate
305. Subsequently,
305 underwent methoxycarbonylation with CO and methanol in the presence of Pd(OAc)
2, Pd(dppf)Cl
2, and TEA to give ester
306. This ester was converted to an acid which was condensed with amines using HATU to yield
307. Chloropyrimidine
305 was also subjected to Buchwald–Hartwig coupling with a series of amines to afford targets
308. A similar approach, in which intermediate
303 was reacted with various alkyl alcohols in the presence of NaH gave
309. Final S
NAr reaction with a series of amines resulted in
310.
Some of the analogs synthesized in this patent were evaluated in a biochemical inhibition assay for PIKfyve, and the results reveal more than 10 compounds exhibiting single-digit nM potency. The compounds were further evaluated in a PIKfyve early endosome antigen 1 assay in which the best compounds demonstrated activity in the 10–100 nM range. The compounds were further evaluated with ferrous amyloid buthionine 1 (FAB1) mouse and PIKfyve TDP-43 yeast models. Compounds that demonstrated low nanomolar potency in the biochemical assay were also active in the PIKfyve TDP-43 yeast model while structures that showed weak activity in the biochemical assay proved ineffective in the PIKfyve TDP-43 models.
An invention publication by Lei et al. explored two small molecule inhibitors of Parkinson’s disease [
112]. Previous research by others [
113] has revealed that leucine-rich repeat kinase 2 (LRRK2) might prove to be a key link to understanding the etiology of Parkinson’s disease. The LRRK2 mechanism functions by blocking the molecular chaperone mediation which induces autophagy and leads to the degradation of α-synuclei that results in toxicity. This chemical mechanism also induces mitochondrial damage and endolysosomal dysfunction, which paves the way for disease progression. LRRK2 kinase inhibitors can reduce damage in a Parkinson’s disease model and can improve motor function in patients. Nitrogen-containing heterocycles, especially the pyrimidine core skeleton, are known to play an important role as LRRK2 inhibitors. This invention aimed to create a drug that could effectively inhibit LRRK2 as a potential treatment for neurodegenerative diseases. The patent identifies several drug scaffolds that are brain penetrating and incorporates these in effective inhibitors of LRRK2 as well as mutant LRRK2 that could be used as a treatment option for chronic neurodegenerative diseases.
In this patent, the requisite pyrimidine derivatives were assembled in two steps shown in
Scheme 38. Reaction of 2,4-dichloro-5-(trifluoromethyl)pyrimidine (
105) with methylamine hydrochloride in methanol afforded
311. Intermediate
311 was then independently subjected to S
NAr reaction with aminopyrazole-piperidine derivatives
312 and
314 in the presence of 0.5 N HCl in
t-butanol at 80 °C to produce candidate LRRK2 inhibitors
313 and
315.
While little about the biological properties of these compounds is revealed in this patent, the compounds synthesized are claimed to have IC50 values of ca. 13.0 nM compared with a known LRRK2 inhibitor which had an IC50 = 90 nM. Though the patent reports that 311 and 313 have better pharmacological profiles than those of known LRRK2 inhibitors, no data are included to support this claim.
A paper by Gelin et al. aimed to develop a potent brain penetrant and a selective glutamate receptor N2B (GluN2B) inhibitor [
114]. Glutamate receptors serve an important function in neuronal activity, by regulating the brain’s predominant excitatory neurotransmitter. Dysfunction of the glutamate receptor
N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) leads to many neurological and psychiatric disorders, including Alzheimer’s disease, Parkinson’s disease, neuropathic pain, stroke, brain trauma, schizophrenia, and depression [
115]. It has been shown that modulation of NMDA with a ketamine antagonist results in very robust antidepressant activity.
The preparations of several pyrimidine–triazoles for this investigation are shown in
Scheme 39. A flow chemistry method was used to convert various aniline derivatives to aryl azides that were cyclized with propargyl alcohol to produce 1,2,3-triazole alcohols
316. Deprotonation of these alcohols with NaH in DMF and S
NAr etherification of 2-chloropyrimidine
317 delivered the target derivatives
318.
The pyrimidine–triazole ethers were evaluated and shown to exhibit very favorable profiles, especially with respect to cardiovascular safety issues. Optimization of both the potency and metabolic characteristics of these model compounds was achieved by the introduction of a metabolic soft spot (a C4-methoxymethyl on the pyrimidine) to trigger metabolic switching. This design feature in the most active compound
319 precluded the formation of metabolites M1 and M2, a result of the loss of the pyrimidine moiety’s ability to afford the triazole alcohol and acid, which in turn manifested in a saturable, nonlinear PK. Some of the PK parameters are condensed for
319 in
Table 15.
Diether 319 also showed very high aqueous solubility, and the compound was highly selective for GluN2B negative allosteric modulator (hGluN2A/C/D, IC50 > 10 μM) over other isoforms. Compound 319 did not have any hERG drawbacks or drug–drug interactions (over 10 μM) and the compound was not found to be a P-glycoprotein (P-gp) substrate. Candidate 319 also achieved 77% GluN2B receptor occupancy 0.5 h after a p.o. dose of 10 mg/kg, with excellent brain permeation (unbound partitioning coefficient, Kp,uu = 0.65). Finally, the compound also had an efficacious plasma EC50 = 541 ng/mL and brain EC50 = 121 ng/mL.
A patent invention by Wagner, et al. sought to develop novel small molecule splicing modulators (SMSMs) for use in treating a variety of diseases, including neurodegenerative and repeat expansion diseases [
116]. The disclosure primarily focused on the neurodegenerative disorder known as Huntington’s disease by targeting the spliceosome. Currently, there is no cure for Huntington’s disease or any way to mitigate its progression. Splicing is carried out by spliceosomes and is an essential process for generating distinct transcripts in different cells and tissue types during the developmental process [
117]. Most cases of the disease are caused by mutation in the spliceosome, while others arise from mutations at the splicing sites, branchpoints, or by various splicing enhancers and silencers. Small molecules, such as RNA splicing modulators, are a recent area of exploration for identifying small molecule modulators with limited chemical series. Thus, there is a great need in this area for the discovery of SMSMs, due to the ability of small molecules to be effective delivery options with good bioavailability.
Access to potential SMSMs for this research is outlined in
Scheme 40. Starting with thioether-substituted 4-chloropyrimidine ester
320, etherification by S
NAr displacement of the C4 chloride afforded
321. Compounds
321 were converted to
322 by oxidation of the thioethers to the sulfones with
m-CPBA. The sulfone groups were displaced by various amines in the presence of K
2CO
3 in ACN to provide the 2-aminopyrimidine esters
323. Hydrolysis of the ester function in
321 with LiOH gave acids
324 which were converted to amide products
325.
The patent did not divulge any ADME or PK properties of the drug candidates synthesized but only claimed IC50 values < 500 nM for some of the promising compounds on the minigene reporter assay PMS1.
Another patent disclosure by Burli and Doyle promoted the invention of
N-(4-aminocyclohexyl)pyrimidine-4-carboxamides as brain permeable cluster of differentiation 38 (CD38) inhibitors for treating disorders associated with CD38 activity [
118]. Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD+) is an essential cellular component in most living organisms and is responsible for redox functions. Though this is the primary role of NAD+ in most organisms, there are other functions for which NAD+ is important. An example of this is the necessity for NAD+ to be maintained to ensure long-term tissue homeostasis. Due to aging, there is a decrease in NAD+ levels, which lowers metabolic function [
119] and leads to debilitating conditions, such as Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s disease. One way to stop the consumption of NAD+ is by inhibiting CD38, which has emerged as a valuable therapeutic approach for age-related disorders. CD38 is a multifunctional protein involved in (1) cellular NAD+ homeostasis via its hydrolase function and (2) the generation of second messengers such as adenosine diphosphate ribose (ADPR) and cyclic-ADPR. Several experiments using CD38 knockout mice have demonstrated the positive effects of CD38 deletion in models of neurodegeneration.
The synthesis of several potential pyrimidine CD38 inhibitors was accomplished in concise fashion as depicted in
Scheme 41. Compound assembly was initiated by reacting 2-chloropyrimidine ester
326 with various five-membered nitrogen heterocycles
327 in the presence of DIPEA or Cs
2CO
3 in DMF at 100 °C to afford
328. Hydrolysis of these heterocyclic pyrimidine esters
328 with LiOH in THF afforded acids
329, which were reacted with various amines in the presence of TEA and propylphosphoric anhydride (T
3P) to deliver the required amides
330.
The analogs synthesized were evaluated for their CD38 hydrolase activity. Many of the compounds showed strong CD38 inhibition at ca. 40 nM or lower, including candidate
331. In terms of pharmacokinetics, the tissue binding assay revealed a wide percentage range of unbound compound in mouse brain. Several compounds showed between 63–68% of unbound compound in mouse brain, with 12–22% of unbound compound in mouse plasma. A single PK study using 10 mg/kg p.o. was carried out to access the PK in brain permeability and revealed that
331 was the most promising derivative (see
Table 16). The results demonstrate a robust 5512 nM concentration of
331 in the brain with a free brain concentration around 3801 nM and an unbound partitioning coefficient (K
p,uu) of around 1.33. The
N-(4-aminocyclohexyl)pyrimidine-4-carboxamides displayed excellent brain permeability, whereas the corresponding cyclohexyl ethers or alcohols showed very low brain concentrations and lower K
p,uu values.