1. Academic Validation
  2. Oxadiazole-isopropylamides as potent and noncovalent proteasome inhibitors

Oxadiazole-isopropylamides as potent and noncovalent proteasome inhibitors

  • J Med Chem. 2013 May 23;56(10):3783-805. doi: 10.1021/jm400221d.
Sevil Ozcan 1 Aslamuzzaman Kazi Frank Marsilio Bin Fang Wayne C Guida John Koomen Harshani R Lawrence Saïd M Sebti
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Drug Discovery Department, Moffitt Cancer Center , 12902 Magnolia Drive, Tampa, Florida 33612, USA.
Abstract

Screening of the 50000 ChemBridge compound library led to the identification of the oxadiazole-isopropylamide 1 (PI-1833) which inhibited chymotrypsin-like (CT-L) activity (IC50 = 0.60 μM) with little effects on the Other two major Proteasome proteolytic activities, trypsin-like (T-L) and postglutamyl-peptide-hydrolysis-like (PGPH-L). LC-MS/MS and dialysis show that 1 is a noncovalent and rapidly reversible CT-L inhibitor. Focused library synthesis provided 11ad (PI-1840) with CT-L activity (IC50 = 27 nM). Detailed SAR studies indicate that the amide moiety and the two phenyl rings are sensitive toward modifications. Hydrophobic residues, such as propyl or butyl in the para position (not ortho or meta) of the A-ring and a m-pyridyl group as B-ring, significantly improve activity. Compound 11ad (IC50 = 0.37 μM) is more potent than 1 (IC50 = 3.5 μM) at inhibiting CT-L activity in intact MDA-MB-468 human breast Cancer cells and inhibiting their survival. The activity of 11ad warrants further preclinical investigation of this class as noncovalent Proteasome inhibitors.

Figures