Systematic Structure-Based Design and Stereoselective Synthesis of Novel Multisubstituted Cyclopentane Derivatives with Potent Antiinfluenza Activity
- 31 October 2001
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
- Vol. 44 (25), 4379-4392
- https://doi.org/10.1021/jm010277p
Abstract
The design and synthesis of novel, orally active, potent, and selective inhibitors of influenza neuraminidase differing structurally from existing neuraminidase inhibitors are described. X-ray crystal structures of complexes of neuraminidase with known five- and six-membered ring inhibitors revealed that potent inhibition of the enzyme is determined by the relative positions of the interacting inhibitor substituents (carboxylate, glycerol, acetamido, hydroxyl) rather than by the absolute position of the central ring. This led us to design potential neuraminidase inhibitors in which the cyclopentane ring served as a scaffold for substituents (carboxylate, guanidino, acetamido, alkyl) that would interact with the four binding pockets of the neuraminidase active site at least as effectively as those of the established six-membered ring inhibitors such as DANA (2), zanamivir (3), and oseltamivir (4). A mixture of the isomers was prepared initially. Protein crystallography of inhibitor−enzyme complexes was used to screen mixtures of isomers in order to identify the most active stereoisomer. A synthetic route to the identified candidate 50 was developed, which featured (3 + 2) cycloaddition of 2-ethylbutyronitrile oxide to methyl (1S,4R)-4[(tert-butoxycarbonyl)amino]cyclopent-2-ene-1-carboxylate (43). Structures of the synthetic compounds were verified by NMR spectroscopy using nuclear Overhauser effect methodology. Two new neuraminidase inhibitors discovered in this work, 50 and 54, have IC50 values vs neuraminidase from influenza A and B of 50 values are comparable or superior to those for zanamivir and oseltamivir, agents recently approved by the FDA for treatment of influenza. The synthetic route used to prepare 50 and 54 was refined so that synthesis of pure active isomer 54, which has five chiral centers, required only seven steps from readily available intermediates. Further manipulation was required to prepare deoxy derivative 50. Because the activities of the two compounds are comparable and 54 [RWJ-270201 (BCX-1812)] is the easier to synthesize, it was selected for further clinical evaluation.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Industry Chafes at APS RulesScience, 1997
- Effective Inhibitors of Hemagglutination by Influenza Virus Synthesized from Polymers Having Active Ester Groups. Insight into Mechanism of InhibitionJournal of Medicinal Chemistry, 1995
- The synthesis of 2,3-didehydro-2,4-dideoxy-4-guanidinyl-N-acetylneuraminic acid: a potent influenza virus sialidase inhibitorCarbohydrate Research, 1994
- Rational design of potent sialidase-based inhibitors of influenza virus replicationNature, 1993
- Binding of influenza virus hemagglutinin to analogs of its cell-surface receptor, sialic acid: analysis by proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and x-ray crystallographyBiochemistry, 1992
- Clinical and epidemiological importance of influenza a viruses resistant to amantadine and rimantadineReviews in Medical Virology, 1992
- Protection against lethal influenza with neuraminidaseVirology, 1988
- SERIOUS MORBIDITY AND MORTALITY ASSOCIATED WITH INFLUENZA EPIDEMICSEpidemiologic Reviews, 1982
- Characterization of temperature sensitive influenza virus mutants defective in neuraminidaseVirology, 1974
- Inhibition of neuraminidase activity by derivatives of 2-deoxy-2,3-dehydro-N-acetylneuraminic acidVirology, 1974