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Synthesis and biological evaluation of orally active prodrugs and analogs of para-aminosalicylic acid (PAS).

Authors :
Hegde, Pooja V.
Howe, Michael D.
Zimmerman, Matthew D.
Boshoff, Helena I.M.
Sharma, Sachin
Remache, Brianna
Jia, Ziyi
Pan, Yan
Baughn, Anthony D.
Dartois, Veronique
Aldrich, Courtney C.
Source :
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. Mar2022, Vol. 232, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Tuberculosis (TB) is one of the world's most deadly infectious diseases resulting in nearly 1.3 million deaths annually and infecting nearly one-quarter of the population. para -Aminosalicylic acid (PAS), an important second-line agent for treating drug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis , has moderate bioavailability and rapid clearance that necessitate high daily doses of up to 12 g per day, which in turn causes severe gastrointestinal disturbances presumably by disruption of gut microbiota and host epithelial cells. We first synthesized a series of alkyl, acyloxy and alkyloxycarbonyloxyalkyl ester prodrugs to increase the oral bioavailability and thereby prevent intestinal accumulation as well as undesirable bioactivation by the gut microbiome to non-natural folate species that exhibit cytotoxicity. The pivoxyl prodrug of PAS was superior to all of the prodrugs examined and showed nearly quantitative absorption. While the conceptually simple prodrug approach improved the oral bioavailability of PAS, it did not address the intrinsic rapid clearance of PAS mediated by N-acetyltransferase-1 (NAT-1). Thus, we next modified the PAS scaffold to reduce NAT-1 catalyzed inactivation by introduction of groups to sterically block N -acetylation and fluorination of the aryl ring of PAS to attenuate N -acetylation by electronically deactivating the para -amino group. Among the mono-fluorinated analogs prepared, 5-fluoro-PAS, exhibited the best activity and an 11-fold decreased rate of inactivation by NAT-1 that translated to a 5-fold improved exposure as measured by area-under-the-curve (AUC) following oral dosing to CD-1 mice. The pivoxyl prodrug and fluorination at the 5-position of PAS address the primary limitations of PAS and have the potential to revitalize this second-line TB drug. [Display omitted] • p -Aminosalicylic acid (PAS), a potent anti-tubercular agent, has limiting oral bioavailability. • Prodrugs and structural analogs improve pharmacokinetic properties of drugs. • Pivoxyl PAS prodrug quantitatively improves oral bioavailability of PAS. • PAS analogs show a 5 to 430-fold improvement in oral bioavailability, but result in a loss of potency. • Increased exposures of 5-Fluoro PAS and N-Methyl PAS are due to poor substrate specificities towards N-acetyl transferase 1. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
02235234
Volume :
232
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
155727099
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmech.2022.114201