Most bromodomain inhibitors mimic the interactions of the natural acetylated lysine (KAc) histone substrate through key interactions with conserved asparagine and tyrosine residues within the binding pocket. Herein we report the optimisation of a series of phenyl sulfonamides which exhibit a novel mode of binding to non-Bromodomain and Extra Terminal Domain (non-BET) bromodomains through displacement of a normally conserved network of four water molecules.Starting from an initial hit molecule we report its divergent optimisation towards the ATPase family AAA domain containing 2 (ATAD2) and Cats Eye Syndrome Chromosome Region, Candidate 2 (CECR2) domains. This work concludes with the identification of (R)-55 (GSK232), a highly selective, cellularly penetrant CECR2 inhibitor with excellent physicochemical properties.
Herein,
a series of 2,3-dihydrobenzofurans have been developed
as highly potent bromo and extra-terminal domain (BET) inhibitors
with 1000-fold selectivity for the second bromodomain (BD2) over the
first bromodomain (BD1). Investment in the development of two orthogonal
synthetic routes delivered inhibitors that were potent and selective
but had raised in vitro clearance and suboptimal
solubility. Insertion of a quaternary center into the 2,3-dihydrobenzofuran
core blocked a key site of metabolism and improved the solubility.
This led to the development of inhibitor 71 (GSK852):
a potent, 1000-fold-selective, highly soluble compound with good in vivo rat and dog pharmacokinetics.
A number
of reports have recently been published describing the
discovery and optimization of bromo and extraterminal inhibitors which
are selective for the second bromodomain (BD2); these include our
own work toward GSK046 (3) and GSK620 (5). This paper describes our approach to mitigating the genotoxicity
risk of GSK046 by replacement of the acetamide functionality with
a heterocyclic ring. This was followed by a template-hopping and hybridization
approach, guided by structure-based drug design, to incorporate learnings
from other BD2-selective series, optimize the vector for the amide
region, and explore the ZA cleft, leading to the identification of
potent, selective, and bioavailable compounds 28 (GSK452), 39 (GSK737), and 36 (GSK217).
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