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Pharmacokinetic Optimization of Small Molecule Janus Kinase 3 Inhibitors to Target Immune Cells.

Julian LauxMichael ForsterLaura RiexingerAnna SchwambornJamil GuezguezChristina PokojMark KudoloLena Marie BergerStefan KnappDieter SchollmeyerJan GuseMichael BurnetStefan A Laufer
Published in: ACS pharmacology & translational science (2022)
Modulation of Janus kinase/signal transducer and activator of transcription (JAK/STAT) signaling is a promising method of treating autoimmune diseases, and the profound potency of clinical compounds makes this mode of action particularly attractive. Other questions that remain unanswered also include: What is the ideal selectivity between JAK1 and JAK3? Which cells are most relevant to JAK blockade? And what is the ideal tissue distribution pattern for addressing specific autoimmune conditions? We hypothesized that JAK3 selectivity is most relevant to low-dose clinical effects and interleukin-10 (IL-10) stimulation in particular, that immune cells are the most important compartment, and that distribution to inflamed tissue is the most important pharmacokinetic characteristic for in vivo disease modification. To test these hypotheses, we prepared modified derivatives of JAK3 specific inhibitors that target C909 near the ATP binding site based on FM-381, first reported in 2016; a compound class that was hitherto limited in uptake and exposure in vivo . These limits appear to be due to metabolic instability of side groups binding in the selectivity pocket. We identified derivatives with improved stability and tissue exposure. Conjugation to macrolide scaffolds with medium chain linkers was sufficient to stabilize the compounds and improve transport to organs while maintaining JAK3 affinity. These conjugates are inflammation targeted JAK3 inhibitors with long tissue half-lives and high exposure to activated immune cells.
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