The
Mediator complex-associated cyclin-dependent kinase CDK8 has
been implicated in human disease, particularly in colorectal cancer
where it has been reported as a putative oncogene. Here we report
the discovery of 109 (CCT251921), a potent, selective,
and orally bioavailable inhibitor of CDK8 with equipotent affinity
for CDK19. We describe a structure-based design approach leading to
the discovery of a 3,4,5-trisubstituted-2-aminopyridine series and
present the application of physicochemical property analyses to successfully
reduce in vivo metabolic clearance, minimize transporter-mediated
biliary elimination while maintaining acceptable aqueous solubility.
Compound 109 affords the optimal compromise of in vitro
biochemical, pharmacokinetic, and physicochemical properties and is
suitable for progression to animal models of cancer.
WNT
signaling is frequently deregulated in malignancy, particularly
in colon cancer, and plays a key role in the generation and maintenance
of cancer stem cells. We report the discovery and optimization of
a 3,4,5-trisubstituted pyridine 9 using a high-throughput
cell-based reporter assay of WNT pathway activity. We demonstrate
a twisted conformation about the pyridine–piperidine bond of 9 by small-molecule X-ray crystallography. Medicinal chemistry
optimization to maintain this twisted conformation, cognisant of physicochemical
properties likely to maintain good cell permeability, led to 74 (CCT251545), a potent small-molecule inhibitor of WNT signaling
with good oral pharmacokinetics. We demonstrate inhibition of WNT
pathway activity in a solid human tumor xenograft model with evidence
for tumor growth inhibition following oral dosing. This work provides
a successful example of hypothesis-driven medicinal chemistry optimization
from a singleton hit against a cell-based pathway assay without knowledge
of the biochemical target.
We
report the discovery of N-substituted 4-(pyridin-2-yl)thiazole-2-amine
derivatives and their subsequent optimization, guided by structure-based
design, to give 8-(1H-pyrazol-3-yl)pyrido[3,4-d]pyrimidin-4(3H)-ones, a series of potent
JmjC histone N-methyl lysine demethylase (KDM) inhibitors
which bind to Fe(II) in the active site. Substitution from C4 of the
pyrazole moiety allows access to the histone peptide substrate binding
site; incorporation of a conformationally constrained 4-phenylpiperidine
linker gives derivatives such as 54j and 54k which demonstrate equipotent activity versus the KDM4 (JMJD2) and
KDM5 (JARID1) subfamily demethylases, selectivity over representative
exemplars of the KDM2, KDM3, and KDM6 subfamilies, cellular permeability
in the Caco-2 assay, and, for 54k, inhibition of H3K9Me3 and H3K4Me3 demethylation in a cell-based assay.
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