Mutant
huntingtin (mHTT) protein carrying the elongated N-terminal
polyglutamine (polyQ) tract misfolds and forms protein aggregates
characteristic of Huntington’s disease (HD) pathology. A high-affinity
ligand specific for mHTT aggregates could serve as a positron emission
tomography (PET) imaging biomarker for HD therapeutic development
and disease progression. To identify such compounds with binding affinity
for polyQ aggregates, we embarked on systematic structural activity
studies; lead optimization of aggregate-binding affinity, unbound
fractions in brain, permeability, and low efflux culminated in the
discovery of compound 1, which exhibited target engagement
in autoradiography (ARG) studies in brain slices from HD mouse models
and postmortem human HD samples. PET imaging studies with 11C-labeled 1 in both HD mice and WT nonhuman primates
(NHPs) demonstrated that the right-hand-side labeled ligand [11C]-1R (CHDI-180R) is a suitable PET tracer for
imaging of mHTT aggregates. [11C]-1R is now
being advanced to human trials as a first-in-class HD PET radiotracer.
The optimization of a series of thiazolopyridine S1P1 agonists with limited activity at the S1P3 receptor is reported. These efforts resulted in the discovery of 1-(3-fluoro-4-(5-(1-phenylcyclopropyl)thiazolo-[5,4-b]pyridin-2-yl)benzyl)azetidine-3-carboxylic acid (5d, AMG 369), a potent dual S1P1/S1P5 agonist with limited activity at S1P3 and no activity at S1P2/S1P4. Dosed orally at 0.1 mg/kg, 5d is shown to reduce blood lymphocyte counts 24 h postdose and delay the onset and reduce the severity of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis in rat.
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