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Conformational-Analysis-Guided Discovery of 2,3-Disubstituted Pyridine IDO1 Inhibitors

Authors :
Lisa M. Kopcho
Johnni Gullo-Brown
Shweta Padmanabhan
Pattasseri Shabeerali
Arvind Mathur
Prabhakar Rajanna
Lorell Discenza
Liping Zhang
Zhenqiu Hong
Sarah C. Traeger
Zheng Yang
Cherney Emily Charlotte
Richard Rampulla
David K. Williams
Gopal Dhar
Kimberly A. Foster
James Kempson
Derrick Maley
Mary F. Grubb
Xiao Zhu
Xin Li
Weifang Shan
Robert M. Borzilleri
Diane Delpy
Kevin Stefanski
T. Thanga Mariappan
Gregory D. Vite
Kathy A. Johnston
Audris Huang
Asoka Ranasinghe
Mark Fereshteh
Aravind Anandam
Steven P. Seitz
John T. Hunt
Aaron Balog
Celia D’Arienzo
Anuradha Gupta
Tai-An Lin
Roshan Y. Nimje
Weiwei Guo
Christine Huang
Venkata Murali
Sandeep Mahankali
Source :
ACS Med Chem Lett
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
American Chemical Society, 2021.

Abstract

[Image: see text] IDO1 inhibitors have shown promise as immunotherapies for the treatment of a variety of cancers, including metastatic melanoma and renal cell carcinoma. We recently reported the identification of several novel heme-displacing IDO1 inhibitors, including the clinical molecules linrodostat (BMS-986205) and BMS-986242. Both molecules contain quinolines that, while being present in successful medicines, are known to be potentially susceptible to oxidative metabolism. Efforts to swap this quinoline with an alternative aromatic system led to the discovery of 2,3-disubstituted pyridines as suitable replacements. Further optimization, which included lowering ClogP in combination with strategic fluorine incorporation, led to the discovery of compound 29, a potent, selective IDO1 inhibitor with robust pharmacodynamic activity in a mouse xenograft model.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
ACS Med Chem Lett
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f0f0d7f8a891846e7ad07844b139d549