Hydrogen−deuterium exchange has been used to determine the hydrogen bonding preferences of a select group of small peptides in organic solvents. This kinetic analysis permitted comparison of hydrogen bond strengths in relation to controls and also indicated the identity of both hydrogen bond donors and hydrogen bond acceptors.
Protein arginine methyltransferase 5 (PRMT5) belongs to a family of enzymes that regulate the posttranslational modification of histones and other proteins via methylation of arginine. Methylation of histones is linked to an increase in transcription and regulates a manifold of functions such as signal transduction and transcriptional regulation. PRMT5 has been shown to be upregulated in the tumor environment of several cancer types, and the inhibition of PRMT5 activity was identified as a potential way to reduce tumor growth. Previously, four different modes of PRMT5 inhibition were knowncompeting (covalently or non-covalently) with the essential cofactor Sadenosyl methionine (SAM), blocking the substrate binding pocket, or blocking both simultaneously. Herein we describe an unprecedented conformation of PRMT5 in which the formation of an allosteric binding pocket abrogates the enzyme's canonical binding site and present the discovery of potent small molecule allosteric PRMT5 inhibitors.
Identification of low-dose, low-molecular-weight,
drug-like inhibitors
of protein–protein interactions (PPIs) is a challenging area
of research. Despite the challenges, the therapeutic potential of
PPI inhibition has driven significant efforts toward this goal. Adding
to recent success in this area, we describe herein our efforts to
optimize a novel purine carboxylic acid-derived inhibitor of the HDM2–p53
PPI into a series of low-projected dose inhibitors with overall favorable
pharmacokinetic and physical properties. Ultimately, a strategy focused
on leveraging known binding hot spots coupled with biostructural information
to guide the design of conformationally constrained analogs and a
focus on efficiency metrics led to the discovery of MK-4688 (compound 56), a highly potent, selective, and low-molecular-weight
inhibitor suitable for clinical investigation.
Protein arginine methyltransferase 5 (PRMT5) is a type II arginine methyltransferase that catalyzes the posttranslational symmetric dimethylation of protein substrates. PRMT5 plays a critical role in regulating biological processes including transcription, cell cycle progression, RNA splicing, and DNA repair. As such, dysregulation of PRMT5 activity is implicated in the development and progression of multiple cancers and is a target of growing clinical interest. Described herein are the structure-based drug designs, robust synthetic efforts, and lead optimization strategies toward the identification of two novel 5,5-fused bicyclic nucleoside-derived classes of potent and efficacious PRMT5 inhibitors. Utilization of compound docking and strain energy calculations inspired novel designs, and the development of flexible synthetic approaches enabled access to complex chemotypes with five contiguous stereocenters. Additional efforts in balancing bioavailability, solubility, potency, and CYP3A4 inhibition led to the identification of diverse lead compounds with favorable profiles, promising in vivo activity, and low human dose projections.
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