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Computer-Aided Design and Synthesis of a New Class of PEX14 Inhibitors: Substituted 2,3,4,5-Tetrahydrobenzo[F][1,4]oxazepines as Potential New Trypanocidal Agents

Fino, Roberto; Lenhart, Dominik; Kalel, Vishal C.; Softley, Charlotte A.; Napolitano, Valeria; Byrne, Ryan; Schliebs, Wolfgang; Dawidowski, Maciej; Erdmann, Ralf; Sattler, Michael; Schneider, Gisbert; Plettenburg, Oliver; Popowicz, Grzegorz M.

Authors

Roberto Fino

Dominik Lenhart

Vishal C. Kalel

Valeria Napolitano

Ryan Byrne

Wolfgang Schliebs

Maciej Dawidowski

Ralf Erdmann

Michael Sattler

Gisbert Schneider

Oliver Plettenburg

Grzegorz M. Popowicz



Abstract

African and American trypanosomiases are estimated to affect several million people across the world, with effective treatments distinctly lacking. New, ideally oral, treatments with higher efficacy against these diseases are desperately needed. Peroxisomal import matrix (PEX) proteins represent a very interesting target for structure- and ligand-based drug design. The PEX5–PEX14 protein–protein interface in particular has been highlighted as a target, with inhibitors shown to disrupt essential cell processes in trypanosomes, leading to cell death. In this work, we present a drug development campaign that utilizes the synergy between structural biology, computer-aided drug design, and medicinal chemistry in the quest to discover and develop new potential compounds to treat trypanosomiasis by targeting the PEX14–PEX5 interaction. Using the structure of the known lead compounds discovered by Dawidowski et al. as the template for a chemically advanced template search (CATS) algorithm, we performed scaffold-hopping to obtain a new class of compounds with trypanocidal activity, based on 2,3,4,5-tetrahydrobenzo[f][1,4]oxazepines chemistry. The initial compounds obtained were taken forward to a first round of hit-to-lead optimization by synthesis of derivatives, which show activities in the range of low- to high-digit micromolar IC50 in the in vitro tests. The NMR measurements confirm binding to PEX14 in solution, while immunofluorescent microscopy indicates disruption of protein import into the glycosomes, indicating that the PEX14–PEX5 protein–protein interface was successfully disrupted. These studies result in development of a novel scaffold for future lead optimization, while ADME testing gives an indication of further areas of improvement in the path from lead molecules toward a new drug active against trypanosomes.

Citation

Fino, R., Lenhart, D., Kalel, V. C., Softley, C. A., Napolitano, V., Byrne, R., Schliebs, W., Dawidowski, M., Erdmann, R., Sattler, M., Schneider, G., Plettenburg, O., & Popowicz, G. M. (2021). Computer-Aided Design and Synthesis of a New Class of PEX14 Inhibitors: Substituted 2,3,4,5-Tetrahydrobenzo[F][1,4]oxazepines as Potential New Trypanocidal Agents. Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling, 61(10), 5256-5268. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00472

Journal Article Type Article
Acceptance Date Oct 1, 2021
Online Publication Date Oct 1, 2021
Publication Date Oct 25, 2021
Deposit Date Feb 24, 2025
Journal Journal of Chemical Information and Modeling
Print ISSN 1549-9596
Electronic ISSN 1549-960X
Publisher American Chemical Society
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 61
Issue 10
Pages 5256-5268
DOI https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00472
Public URL https://keele-repository.worktribe.com/output/1078806
Publisher URL https://pubs.acs.org/doi/full/10.1021/acs.jcim.1c00472