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Structure-Based Design and Preclinical Characterization of Selective and Orally Bioavailable Factor XIa Inhibitors: Demonstrating the Power of an Integrated S1 Protease Family Approach

Authors :
Allan D'Arcy
Nikolaus Schiering
Cary Fridrich
Yu-Hsin Chiu
Donglei Liu
Micah Hollis-Symynkywicz
Edwige Lorthiois
Hyungchul Kim
Darija Dedic
Richard Sedrani
Rose Mo
Solene Dussauge
Calhoun Amy
Stefanie Harlfinger
Treeve Currie
Simon Ruedisser
Lionel Muller
Rohit Duvadie
Ulrich Hassiepen
Adelaide Druet
Louise Kirman
Jason Elliott
Kenji Namoto
Gabriela Monnet
Francesca Perruccio
Paul Ramage
Eva Altmann
David Louis Feldman
Fabien Tritsch
Xueming Huang
Joerg Berghausen
Tanzina Fazal
Richard Zessis
James Roache
Eric T Williams
Christopher M. Adams
Wilhelm A. Weihofen
Viktor Hornak
Peter Delgado
Peter Hoffmann
David Barnes-Seeman
Douglas Bevan
ShuangXi Wang
Hong Liu
Martin Renatus
Celine Dentel
Corinne Durand
Juergen Klaus Maibaum
Guiqing Liang
Kamal Fettis
Gordon Turner
Rajeshri Ganesh Karki
Loren Lindsley
Julie Lachal
Andreas Hein
Source :
Journal of medicinal chemistry. 63(15)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

The serine protease Factor XI (FXI) is a prominent drug target as it holds promise to deliver efficacious anti-coagulation without an enhanced risk of major bleeds. Several efforts have been described targeting the active form of the enzyme, FXIa. Herein we disclose our efforts to identify potent, selective, and orally bioavailable inhibitors of FXIa. Compound 1, identified from a diverse library of internal serine protease inhibitors, was originally designed as a complement Factor D inhibitor and exhibited sub-micromolar FXIa activity and an encouraging ADME profile while being devoid of peptidomimetic architecture. Optimization of interactions in the S1, S1β, and S1` pockets of FXIa through a combination of structure-based drug design and traditional medicinal chemistry led to the discovery of compound 23 with sub-nanomolar potency on FXIa, enhanced selectivity over other coagulation proteases, and a pre-clinical PK profile consistent with bid dosing in patients.

Details

ISSN :
15204804
Volume :
63
Issue :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of medicinal chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....0d2ad110af1ecb6144e75a9298044b57