1. Academic Validation
  2. Synthesis, structural analysis, and biological evaluation of thioxoquinazoline derivatives as phosphodiesterase 7 inhibitors

Synthesis, structural analysis, and biological evaluation of thioxoquinazoline derivatives as phosphodiesterase 7 inhibitors

  • ChemMedChem. 2009 May;4(5):866-76. doi: 10.1002/cmdc.200900043.
Tania Castaño 1 Huanchen Wang Nuria E Campillo Sara Ballester Coral González-García Javier Hernández Concepción Pérez Jimena Cuenca Ana Pérez-Castillo Ana Martínez Oscar Huertas José Luis Gelpí F Javier Luque Hengming Ke Carmen Gil
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Instituto de Química Médica (CSIC), Juan de la Cierva 3, 28006 Madrid, Spain.
Abstract

PDE7 inhibitors regulate pro-inflammatory and immune T-cell functions, and are a potentially novel class of drugs especially useful in the treatment of a wide variety of immune and inflammatory disorders. Starting from our lead family of thioxoquinazolines, we designed, synthesized, and characterized a novel series of thioxoquinazoline derivatives. Many of these compounds showed inhibitory potencies at sub-micromolar levels against the catalytic domain of PDE7A1 and at the micromolar level against PDE4D2. Cell-based studies showed that these compounds not only increased intracellular cAMP levels, but also had interesting anti-inflammatory properties within a therapeutic window. The in silico data predict that these compounds are capable of the crossing the blood-brain barrier. The X-ray crystal structure of the PDE7A1 catalytic domain in complex with compound 15 at a resolution of 2.4 A demonstrated that hydrophobic interactions at the active site pocket are a key feature. This structure, together with molecular modeling, provides insight into the selectivity of the PDE inhibitors and a template for the discovery of new PDE7 or PDE7/PDE4 dual inhibitors.

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