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Multitarget, Selective Compound Design Yields Potent Inhibitors of a Kinetoplastid Pteridine Reductase 1.

Ina PoehnerAntonio QuotadamoJoanna Panecka-HofmanRosaria LucianiMatteo SantucciPasquale LincianoGiacomo LandiFlavio Di PisaLucia Dello IaconoCecilia PozziStefano ManganiSheraz GulGesa WittBernhard EllingerMaria KuzikovNuno SantaremAnabela Cordeiro-da-SilvaMaria Paola CostiAlberto VenturelliRebecca C Wade
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2022)
The optimization of compounds with multiple targets is a difficult multidimensional problem in the drug discovery cycle. Here, we present a systematic, multidisciplinary approach to the development of selective antiparasitic compounds. Computational fragment-based design of novel pteridine derivatives along with iterations of crystallographic structure determination allowed for the derivation of a structure-activity relationship for multitarget inhibition. The approach yielded compounds showing apparent picomolar inhibition of T. brucei pteridine reductase 1 (PTR1), nanomolar inhibition of L. major PTR1, and selective submicromolar inhibition of parasite dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) versus human DHFR. Moreover, by combining design for polypharmacology with a property-based on-parasite optimization, we found three compounds that exhibited micromolar EC 50 values against T. brucei brucei while retaining their target inhibition. Our results provide a basis for the further development of pteridine-based compounds, and we expect our multitarget approach to be generally applicable to the design and optimization of anti-infective agents.
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