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Dual Inhibition of Mycobacterium tuberculosis and the Host TGFBR1 by an Anilinoquinazoline.

Meganathan NandakumarAnja OllodartNeil FleckNirav R KapadiaAndrew FrandoVishant BoradiaJeffery L SmithJunxi ChenWilliam J ZuercherTimothy M WillsonChristoph Grundner
Published in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2023)
Tuberculosis (TB) control is complicated by the emergence of drug resistance. Promising strategies to prevent drug resistance are the targeting of nonreplicating, drug-tolerant bacterial populations and targeting of the host, but inhibitors and targets for either are still rare. In a cell-based screen of ATP-competitive inhibitors, we identified compounds with in vitro activity against replicating Mycobacterium tuberculosis ( Mtb ), and an anilinoquinazoline (AQA) that also had potent activity against nonreplicating and persistent Mtb . AQA was originally developed to inhibit human transforming growth factor receptor 1 (TGFBR1), a host kinase that is predicted to have host-adverse effects during Mtb infection. The structure-activity relationship of this dually active compound identified the pyridyl-6-methyl group as being required for potent Mtb inhibition but a liability for P450 metabolism. Pyrrolopyrimidine ( 43 ) emerged as the optimal compound that balanced micromolar inhibition of nonreplicating Mtb and TGFBR1 while also demonstrating improved metabolic stability and pharmacokinetic profiles.
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