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Discovery of Aminothiazole Inhibitors of Cyclin-Dependent Kinase 2: Synthesis, X-ray Crystallographic Analysis, and Biological Activities

Authors :
Rawlins David B
Kevin R. Webster
Michael A. Poss
Chieh Ying Chang
Roberta Batorsky
Craig R. Fairchild
Toomas Mitt
Weifang Shan
Kristen A. Kellar
Hai Yun Xiao
John S. Tokarski
John T. Hunt
Francis Y. Lee
Janet G. Mulheron
Kyoung S. Kim
Nikola P. Pavletich
David Bol
Amrita Kamath
John S. Sack
Urvashi V. Roongta
Zhen Wei Cai
Isia Bursuker
Raj N. Misra
William G. Humphreys
Songfeng Lu
Wen Ching Han
Punit Marathe
S. David Kimball
Hong Zhu
Ligang Qian
Source :
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry. 45:3905-3927
Publication Year :
2002
Publisher :
American Chemical Society (ACS), 2002.

Abstract

High throughput screening identified 2-acetamido-thiazolylthio acetic ester 1 as an inhibitor of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2). Because this compound is inactive in cells and unstable in plasma, we have stabilized it to metabolic hydrolysis by replacing the ester moiety with a 5-ethyl-substituted oxazole as in compound 14. Combinatorial and parallel synthesis provided a rapid analysis of the structure-activity relationship (SAR) for these inhibitors of CDK2, and over 100 analogues with IC(50) values in the 1-10 nM range were rapidly prepared. The X-ray crystallographic data of the inhibitors bound to the active site of CDK2 protein provided insight into the binding modes of these inhibitors, and the SAR of this series of analogues was rationalized. Many of these analogues displayed potent and broad spectrum antiproliferative activity across a panel of tumor cell lines in vitro. In addition, A2780 ovarian carcinoma cells undergo rapid apoptosis following exposure to CDK2 inhibitors of this class. Mechanism of action studies have confirmed that the phosphorylation of CDK2 substrates such as RB, histone H1, and DNA polymerase alpha (p70 subunit) is reduced in the presence of compound 14. Further optimization led to compounds such as water soluble 45, which possesses a favorable pharmacokinetic profile in mice and demonstrates significant antitumor activity in vivo in several murine and human models, including an engineered murine mammary tumor that overexpresses cyclin E, the coactivator of CDK2.

Details

ISSN :
15204804 and 00222623
Volume :
45
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....97262dbf4ae7cd3439043a8a4f6e0a73
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1021/jm0201520