1. Activity-guided development of potent and selective toll-like receptor 9 antagonists.
- Author
-
Roy, Swarnali, Pal, Sourav, Satish, Sohal, Goon, Sunny, Talukdar, Arindam, Paul, Barnali, Mukherjee, Ayan, Rahaman, Oindrila, Ganguly, Dipyaman, Ghosh, Amrit R., Raychaudhuri, Deblina, and Bhattacharya, Roopkatha
- Subjects
- *
INFLAMMATION , *DRUG design , *PHARMACOKINETICS , *ENDOSOMES , *QUINAZOLINE - Abstract
Abstract TLR9 is one of the major innate immune receptors expressed in the endosomes of pDCs and B cells in humans. Aberrant TLR9 activation is implicated in several autoimmune and metabolic disorders as well as in sepsis, making this receptor an important therapeutic target, though specific TLR9 antagonists are yet to be available for clinical use. Here we elucidate the importance of specific physiochemical properties through substitution patterns in quinazoline scaffold to achieve potent hTLR9 inhibition at < 50 nM as well as > 600 fold selectivity against hTLR7, another closely related TLR that shares downstream signaling with TLR9 but plays distinct roles in physiology and pathology. Assays were performed using hPBMC and reporter cell lines. Favorable in vitro ADME profile, pharmacokinetics as well as validation in a clinically relevant in vivo TLR9-inhibition efficacy model in mice establish these novel TLR9-antagonists as candidate therapeutic agents in relevant clinical contexts. Graphical abstract Image 1 Highlights • Substitutions in quinazoline that influence potency and specificity for hTLR9. • Favourable in vitro ADME and pharmacokinetics in rodent model. • In vivo TLR9-inhibition efficacy was investigated in a rodent model. • Development of potent TLR9 antagonist with excellent selectivity against TLR7. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF