Scaffold-Hopping Strategy on a Series of Proteasome Inhibitors Led to a Preclinical Candidate for the Treatment of Visceral Leishmaniasis.
Michael G ThomasStephen BrandManu De RyckerFabio ZuccottoIva LukacPeter G DoddEun-Jung KoSujatha ManthriKate McGonagleMaria Osuna-CabelloJennifer RileyCaterina PontFrederick SimeonsLaste StojanovskiJohn ThomasStephen ThompsonElisabet ViaynaJose M FiandorJ Julio MartinPaul G WyattTimothy J MilesKevin D ReadMaria MarcoIan H GilbertPublished in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2021)
There is an urgent need for new treatments for visceral leishmaniasis (VL), a parasitic infection which impacts heavily large areas of East Africa, Asia, and South America. We previously reported on the discovery of GSK3494245/DDD01305143 (1) as a preclinical candidate for VL and, herein, we report on the medicinal chemistry program that led to its identification. A hit from a phenotypic screen was optimized to give a compound with in vivo efficacy, which was hampered by poor solubility and genotoxicity. The work on the original scaffold failed to lead to developable compounds, so an extensive scaffold-hopping exercise involving medicinal chemistry design, in silico profiling, and subsequent synthesis was utilized, leading to the preclinical candidate. The compound was shown to act via proteasome inhibition, and we report on the modeling of different scaffolds into a cryo-EM structure and the impact this has on our understanding of the series' structure-activity relationships.