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A Molecular Hybridization Approach for the Design of Potent, Highly Selective, and Brain-Penetrant N-Myristoyltransferase Inhibitors.

Justin R HarrisonStephen BrandVictoria SmithDavid A RobinsonStephen ThompsonAlasdair SmithKenneth DaviesNgai Yi MokLeah S TorrieIain CollieIrene HallyburtonSuzanne NorvalFrederick R C SimeonsLaste StojanovskiJulie A FrearsonRuth BrenkPaul G WyattIan H GilbertKevin D Read
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2018)
Crystallography has guided the hybridization of two series of Trypanosoma brucei N-myristoyltransferase (NMT) inhibitors, leading to a novel highly selective series. The effect of combining the selectivity enhancing elements from two pharmacophores is shown to be additive and has led to compounds that have greater than 1000-fold selectivity for TbNMT vs HsNMT. Further optimization of the hybrid series has identified compounds with significant trypanocidal activity capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier. By using CF-1 mdr1a deficient mice, we were able to demonstrate full cures in vivo in a mouse model of stage 2 African sleeping sickness. This and previous work provides very strong validation for NMT as a drug target for human African trypanosomiasis in both the peripheral and central nervous system stages of disease.
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