Structure- and Property-Based Optimization of Efficient Pan-Bromodomain and Extra Terminal Inhibitors to Identify Oral and Intravenous Candidate I-BET787.
David J HirstPaul BamboroughNiam Al-MahdiDavina C AngellHeather A BarnettAndrew BaxterRino A BitJack A BrownChun-Wa ChungPeter D CraggsRobert P DavisEmmanuel H DemontAlan FerrieLaurie J GordonIsobel HaradaTim C T HoIan D HolyerEdward Hooper-GreenhillKatherine L JonesMatthew J LindonCerys LovattDavid LugoClaire MallerGrant McGonagleCassie MessengerDarren J MitchellDavid D PascoeVipulkumar K PatelChristopher PattenDarren L PooleRishi R ShahInmaculada RiojaKayleigh A J StaffordDaniel TapeSimon TaylorNatalie H TheodoulouLaura TomlinsonIan D WallChristopher R WellawayGemma WhiteRab K PrinjhaPhilip G HumphreysPublished in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2024)
The bromodomain and extra terminal (BET) family of bromodomain-containing proteins are important epigenetic regulators that elicit their effect through binding histone tail N -acetyl lysine (KAc) post-translational modifications. Recognition of such markers has been implicated in a range of oncology and immune diseases and, as such, small-molecule inhibition of the BET family bromodomain-KAc protein-protein interaction has received significant interest as a therapeutic strategy, with several potential medicines under clinical evaluation. This work describes the structure- and property-based optimization of a ligand and lipophilic efficient pan-BET bromodomain inhibitor series to deliver candidate I-BET787 ( 70 ) that demonstrates efficacy in a mouse model of inflammation and suitable properties for both oral and intravenous (IV) administration. This focused two-phase explore-exploit medicinal chemistry effort delivered the candidate molecule in 3 months with less than 100 final compounds synthesized.