作者
Chunhui Huang,Christian Fischer,Michelle R. Machacek,Stéphane Bogen,Tesfaye Biftu,Xianhai Huang,Michael H. Reutershan,Ryan D. Otte,Qingmei Hong,Zhicai Wu,Yang Yu,Min Park,Lei Chen,Purakkattle Biju,Ian Knemeyer,Ping Lü,Christopher J. Kochansky,Michael B. Hicks,Yong Liu,Roy Helmy,Xavier Fradera,Anthony D’Onofrio,Joshua Close,Matthew L. Maddess,Catherine A. White,David L. Sloman,Nunzio Sciammetta,Jun Lu,Craig Gibeau,Vladimir Simov,Hongjun Zhang,Peter H. Fuller,David J. Witter
摘要
Mutant isocitrate dehydrogenase 1 (IDH1) has been identified as an attractive oncology target for which >70% of grade II and III gliomas and ∼10% of acute myeloid leukemia (AML) harbor somatic IDH1 mutations. These mutations confer a neomorphic gain of function, leading to the production of the oncometabolite (R)-2-hydroxyglutarate (2-HG). We identified and developed a potent, selective, and orally bioavailable brain-penetrant tricyclic diazepine scaffold that inhibits mutant IDH1. During the course of in vitro metabolism studies, GSH-adduct metabolites were observed. The hypothesis for GSH-adduct formation was driven by the electron-rich nature of the tricyclic core. Herein, we describe our efforts to reduce the electron-rich nature of the core. Ultimately, a strategy focused on core modifications to block metabolic hot spots coupled with substitution pattern changes (C8 N → C linked) led to the identification of new tricyclic analogues with minimal GSH-adduct formation across species while maintaining an overall balanced profile.