Improving Drug Delivery While Tailoring Prodrug Activation to Modulate C max and C min by Optimization of (Carbonyl)oxyalkyl Linker-Based Prodrugs of Atazanavir.
Murugaiah A M SubbaiahLakshumanan SubramaniThangeswaran RamarSalil DesaiSarmistha SinhaSandhya MandlekarJohn F KadowSusan JenkinsMark KrystalMurali SubramanianSrikanth SridharShweta PadmanabhanPriyadeep BhutaniRambabu ArlaNicholas A MeanwellPublished in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2022)
Structure-property relationships associated with a series of (carbonyl)oxyalkyl amino acid ester prodrugs of the marketed HIV-1 protease inhibitor atazanavir ( 1 ), designed to enhance the systemic drug delivery, were examined. Compared to previously reported prodrugs, optimized candidates delivered significantly enhanced plasma exposure and trough concentration ( C min at 24 h) of 1 in rats while revealing differentiated PK paradigms based on the kinetics of prodrug activation and drug release. Prodrugs incorporating primary amine-containing amino acid promoieties offered the benefit of rapid bioactivation that translated into low circulating levels of the prodrug while delivering a high C max value of 1 . Interestingly, the kinetic profile of prodrug cleavage could be tailored for slower activation by structural modification of the amino terminus to either a tertiary amine or a dipeptide motif, which conferred a circulating depot of the prodrug that orchestrated a sustained release of 1 along with substantially reduced C max and a further enhanced C min .