Macrocycles are of increasing interest as chemical probes and drugs for intractable targets like protein-protein interactions, but the determinants of their cell permeability and oral absorption are poorly understood. To enable rational design of cell-permeable macrocycles, we generated an extensive data set under consistent experimental conditions for more than 200 non-peptidic, de novo-designed macrocycles from the Broad Institute's diversity-oriented screening collection. This revealed how specific functional groups, substituents and molecular properties impact cell permeability. Analysis of energy-minimized structures for stereo- and regioisomeric sets provided fundamental insight into how dynamic, intramolecular interactions in the 3D conformations of macrocycles may be linked to physicochemical properties and permeability. Combined use of quantitative structure-permeability modeling and the procedure for conformational analysis now, for the first time, provides chemists with a rational approach to design cell-permeable non-peptidic macrocycles with potential for oral absorption.
Current immunosuppressive therapies act on T lymphocytes by modulation of cytokine production, modulation of signaling pathways or by inhibition of the enzymes of nucleotide biosynthesis. We have identified a previously unknown series of immunomodulatory compounds that potently inhibit human and rat T lymphocyte proliferation in vitro and in vivo in immune-mediated animal models of disease, acting by a novel mechanism. Here we identify the target of these compounds, the monocarboxylate transporter MCT1 (SLC16A1), using a strategy of photoaffinity labeling and proteomic characterization. We show that inhibition of MCT1 during T lymphocyte activation results in selective and profound inhibition of the extremely rapid phase of T cell division essential for an effective immune response. MCT1 activity, however, is not required for many stages of lymphocyte activation, such as cytokine production, or for most normal physiological functions. By pursuing a chemistry-led target identification strategy, we have discovered that MCT1 is a previously unknown target for immunosuppressive therapy and have uncovered an unsuspected role for MCT1 in immune biology.
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