1. Discovery of a novel 2,4-dimethylquinoline-6-carboxamide M4 positive allosteric modulator (PAM) chemotype via scaffold hopping
- Author
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Alice L. Rodriguez, Julie L. Engers, Madeline F. Long, Darren W. Engers, Matthew T. Jenkins, Colleen M. Niswender, Thomas M. Bridges, Kayla J. Temple, Sichen Chang, Alison R. Gregro, Katherine J. Watson, Vincent B. Luscombe, P. Jeffrey Conn, and Craig W. Lindsley
- Subjects
0301 basic medicine ,Allosteric modulator ,medicine.drug_class ,Stereochemistry ,Pyridines ,Clinical Biochemistry ,Allosteric regulation ,Drug Evaluation, Preclinical ,Pharmaceutical Science ,Carboxamide ,Plasma protein binding ,Biochemistry ,Article ,Rats, Sprague-Dawley ,03 medical and health sciences ,Structure-Activity Relationship ,0302 clinical medicine ,Allosteric Regulation ,Drug Discovery ,medicine ,Structure–activity relationship ,Moiety ,Animals ,Molecular Biology ,Receptor, Muscarinic M4 ,Chemistry ,Organic Chemistry ,Photoredox catalysis ,Brain ,Amides ,Rats ,030104 developmental biology ,Molecular Medicine ,Pharmacophore ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Half-Life ,Protein Binding - Abstract
This Letter details our efforts to replace the 3-amino moiety, an essential pharmacophore for M4 PAM activity in most M4 PAMs to date, within the thieno[2,3-b]pyridine core, as the β-amino carboxamide motif has been shown to engender poor solubility, varying degrees of P-gp efflux and represents a structural alert. A scaffold hopping exercise identified a novel 2,4-dimethylquinoline carboxamide core that provided M4 PAM activity and good CNS penetration without an amino moiety. In addition, MacMillan photoredox catalysis chemistry was essential for construction of the 2,4-dimethylquinoline core.
- Published
- 2017