The multitarget approach has gained increasing acceptance as a useful tool to address complex and multifactorial maladies such as Alzheimer's disease (AD). The concurrent inhibition of the validated AD targets β-secretase (BACE-1) and glycogen synthase kinase-3β (GSK-3β) by attacking both β-amyloid and tau protein cascades has been identified as a promising AD therapeutic strategy. In our study, curcumin was identified as a lead compound for the simultaneous inhibition of both targets; therefore, synthetic efforts were dedicated to obtaining a small library of novel curcumin-based analogues, and a number of potent and balanced dual-target inhibitors were obtained. In particular, 2, 6, and 7 emerged as promising drug candidates endowed with neuroprotective potential and brain permeability. Notably, for some new compounds the symmetrical diketo and the β-keto-enol tautomeric forms were purposely isolated and tested in vitro, allowing us to gain insight into the key requirements for BACE-1 and GSK-3β inhibition.
Substitution of a hydrogen atom with its heavy isotope deuterium entails the addition of one neutron to a molecule. Despite being a subtle change, this structural modification, known as deuteration, may improve the pharmacokinetic and/or toxicity profile of drugs, potentially translating into improvements in efficacy and safety compared with the non-deuterated counterparts. Initially, efforts to exploit this potential primarily led to the development of deuterated analogues of marketed drugs through a ‘deuterium switch’ approach, such as deutetrabenazine, which became the first deuterated drug to receive FDA approval in 2017. In the past few years, the focus has shifted to applying deuteration in novel drug discovery, and the FDA approved the pioneering de novo deuterated drug deucravacitinib in 2022. In this Review, we highlight key milestones in the field of deuteration in drug discovery and development, emphasizing recent and instructive medicinal chemistry programmes and discussing the opportunities and hurdles for drug developers, as well as the questions that remain to be addressed.
It is widely accepted that drug–target association and dissociation rates directly affect drug efficacy and safety. To rationally optimize drug binding kinetics, one must know the atomic arrangement of the protein–ligand complex during the binding/unbinding process in order to detect stable and metastable states. Whereas experimental approaches can determine kinetic constants with fairly good accuracy, computational approaches based on molecular dynamics (MD) simulations can deliver the atomistic details of the unbinding process. Furthermore, they can also be utilized prospectively to predict residence time (i.e., the inverse of unbinding kinetics constant, k off) with an acceptable level of accuracy. Here, we report a novel method based on adiabatic bias MD with an electrostatics-like collective variable (dubbed elABMD) for sampling protein–ligand dissociation events in two kinases. elABMD correctly ranked a ligand series on glucokinase, in agreement with experimental data and previous calculations. Subsequently, we applied the new method prospectively to a congeneric series of GSK-3β inhibitors. For this series, new crystal structures were generated and the residence time was experimentally measured with surface plasmon resonance (SPR). There was good agreement between computational predictions and experimental measures, suggesting that elABMD is an innovative and efficient tool for calculating residence times.
BACKGROUND AND PURPOSEToll-like receptor 4 (TLR4) plays a key role in the induction of inflammatory responses both in peripheral organs and the CNS. Curcumin exerts anti-inflammatory functions by interfering with LPS-induced dimerization of TLR4-myeloid differentiation protein-2 (MD-2) complex and suppressing pro-inflammatory mediator release. However, the inhibitory mechanism of curcumin remains to be defined. EXPERIMENTAL APPROACHBinding of bis-demethoxycurcumin (GG6) and its cyclized pyrazole analogue (GG9), lacking the 1,3-dicarbonyl function, to TLR4-MD-2 was determined using molecular docking simulations. The effects of these compounds on cytokine release and NF-κB activation were examined by ELISA and fluorescence staining in LPS-stimulated primary microglia. Interference with TLR4 dimerization was assessed by immunoprecipitation in Ba/F3 cells. KEY RESULTSBoth curcumin analogues bound to the hydrophobic region of the MD-2 pocket. However, only curcumin and GG6, both possessing the 1,3-diketone moiety, inhibited LPS-induced TLR4 dimerization, activation of NF-κB and secretion of proinflammatory cytokines in primary microglia. Consistent with the ability of 1,3-diketones to coordinate divalent metal ions, LPS stimulation in a low magnesium environment decreased pro-inflammatory cytokine release and NF-κB p65 nuclear translocation in microglia and decreased TLR4-MD-2 dimerization in Ba/F3 cells. Curcumin and GG6 also significantly reduced cytokine output in contrast to the pyrazole analogue GG9. CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATIONSThese results indicate that phenolic 1,3-diketones, with a structural motif able to coordinate magnesium ions, can modulate LPSmediated TLR4-MD-2 signalling. Taken together, these studies identify a previously uncharacterized mechanism involving magnesium, underlying the inflammatory responses to LPS. Abbreviations
All currently used first-line and second-line drugs for the treatment of leishmaniasis exhibit several drawbacks including toxicity, high costs and route of administration. Furthermore, some drugs are associated with the emergence of drug resistance. Thus, the development of new treatments for leishmaniasis is a priority in the field of neglected tropical diseases. The present work highlights the use of natural derived products, i.e. chalcones, as potential source of antileishmanial agents. Thirty-one novel chalcone compounds have been synthesized and their activity has been evaluated against promastigotes of Leishmania donovani; 16 compounds resulted active against L. donovani in a range from 3.0 to 21.5 μM, showing low toxicity against mammalian cells. Among these molecules, 6 and 16 showed good inhibitory activity on both promastigotes and intracellular amastigotes, coupled with an high selectivity index. Furthermore, compounds 6 and 16 inhibited the promastigote growth of other leishmanial species, including L. tropica, L. major and L. infantum. Finally, 6 and 16 interacted with high affinity with trypanothione reductase (TR), an essential enzyme for the leishmanial parasite and compound 6 inhibited TR with sub-micromolar potency. Thus, the effective inhibitory activity against Leishmania, the lack of toxicity on mammalian cells and the ability to block a crucial parasite's enzyme, highlight the potential for compound 6 to be optimized as novel drug candidate against leishmaniasis.
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