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Design of OSMI-4 Analogs Using Scaffold Hopping: Investigating the Importance of the Uridine Mimic in the Binding of OGT Inhibitors.

Cyril BalsollierTihomir TomašičDaniel YasiniSimon BijkerkMarko AnderluhRoland J Pieters
Published in: ChemMedChem (2023)
β-N-Acetylglucosamine transferase (OGT) inhibition is considered an important topic in medicinal chemistry. The involvement of O-GlcNAcylation in several important biological pathways is pointing to OGT as a potential therapeutic target. The field of OGT inhibitors drastically changed after the discovery of the 7-quinolone-4-carboxamide scaffold and its optimization to the first nanomolar OGT inhibitor: OSMI-4. While OSMI-4 is still the most potent inhibitor reported to date, its physicochemical properties are limiting its use as a potential drug candidate as well as a biological tool. In this study, we have introduced a simple modification (elongation) of the peptide part of OSMI-4 that limits the unwanted cyclisation during OSMI-4 synthesis while retaining OGT inhibitory potency. Secondly, we have kept this modified peptide unchanged while incorporating new sulfonamide UDP mimics to try to improve binding of newly designed OGT inhibitors in the UDP-binding site. With the use of computational methods, a small library of OSMI-4 derivatives was designed, prepared and evaluated that provided information about the OGT binding pocket and its specificity toward quinolone-4-carboxamides.
Keyphrases
  • healthcare
  • emergency department
  • dna binding
  • binding protein
  • human health
  • health information
  • drug discovery