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Bioactivation of cyclopropyl rings by P450: an observation encountered during the optimisation of a series of hepatitis C virus NS5B inhibitors.

Authors :
Xiaoliang Zhuo
Ying-Zi Wang
Xiaohua Stella Huang
Yue-Zhong Shu
Johnson, Benjamin M.
Kap-Sun Yeung
Juliang Zhu
Parcella, Kyle E.
Eastman, Kyle J.
Kadow, John F.
Meanwell, Nicholas A.
Source :
Xenobiotica; Dec2018, Vol. 48 Issue 12, p1215-1226, 12p
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

1. Due to its unique C-C and C-H bonding properties, conformational preferences and relative hydrophilicity, the cyclopropyl ring has been used as a synthetic building block in drug discovery to modulate potency and drug-like properties. During an effort to discover inhibitors of the hepatitis C virus non-structural protein 5B with improved potency and genotype-coverage profiles, the use of a pyrimidinylcyclopropylbenzamide moiety linked to a C6-substituted benzofuran or azabenzofuran core scaffold was explored in an effort to balance antiviral potency and metabolic stability. 2. In vitro metabolism studies of two compounds from this C6-substituted series revealed an NADPH-dependent bioactivation pathway leading to the formation of multiple glutathione (GSH) conjugates. Analysis of these conjugates by LC-MS and NMR demonstrated that the cyclopropyl group was the site of bioactivation. Based on the putative structures and molecular weights of the cyclopropyl-GSH conjugates, a multi-step mechanism was proposed to explain the formation of these metabolites by P450. This mechanism involves hydrogen atom abstraction to form a cyclopropyl radical, followed by a ring opening rearrangement and reaction with GSH. 3. These findings provided important information to the medicinal chemistry team which responded by replacing the cyclopropyl ring with a gem-dimethyl group. Subsequent compounds bearing this feature were shown to avert the bioactivation pathways in question. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00498254
Volume :
48
Issue :
12
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Xenobiotica
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
133767337
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/00498254.2017.1409915