Howard Bregman,Jeffrey R. Simard,Kristin L. Andrews,Shawn Ayube,Hao Chen,Hakan Günaydin,Angel Guzmán-Pérez,Jiali Hu,Liyue Huang,Xin Huang,Paul Krolikowski,Sonya G. Lehto,Richard T. Lewis,Klaus Michelsen,Pamela Pegman,Matthew Plant,P.L. Shaffer,Yohannes Teffera,Shuyan Yi,Maosheng Zhang,Jacinthe Gingras,Erin F. DiMauro
Current pain therapeutics suffer from undesirable psychotropic and sedative side effects, as well as abuse potential. Glycine receptors (GlyRs) are inhibitory ligand-gated ion channels expressed in nerves of the spinal dorsal horn, where their activation is believed to reduce transmission of painful stimuli. Herein, we describe the identification and hit-to-lead optimization of a novel class of tricyclic sulfonamides as allosteric GlyR potentiators. Initial optimization of high-throughput screening (HTS) hit 1 led to the identification of 3, which demonstrated ex vivo potentiation of glycine-activated current in mouse dorsal horn neurons from spinal cord slices. Further improvement of potency and pharmacokinetics produced in vivo proof-of-concept tool molecule 20 (AM-1488), which reversed tactile allodynia in a mouse spared-nerve injury (SNI) model. Additional structural optimization provided highly potent potentiator 32 (AM-3607), which was cocrystallized with human GlyRα3cryst to afford the first described potentiator-bound X-ray cocrystal structure within this class of ligand-gated ion channels (LGICs).