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1.
Bioorg Med Chem Lett ; 26(22): 5476-5480, 2016 11 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27777011

ABSTRACT

The inflammatory caspases (caspase-1, -4 and -5) are potential therapeutic targets for autoimmune and inflammatory diseases due to their involvement in the immune response upon inflammasome formation. A series of small molecules based on the 4-(piperazin-1-yl)-2,6-di(pyrrolidin-1-yl)pyrimidine scaffold were synthesized with varying substituents on the piperazine ring. Several compounds were pan-selective inhibitors of the inflammatory caspases, caspase-1, -4 and -5, with the ethylbenzene derivative CK-1-41 displaying low nanomolar Ki values across this family of caspases. Three analogs were nearly 10 fold selective for caspase-5 over caspase-1 and -4. The compounds display non-competitive, time dependent inhibition profiles. To our knowledge, this series is the first example of small molecule inhibitors of all three inflammatory caspases.


Subject(s)
Caspase 1/metabolism , Caspase Inhibitors/chemistry , Caspase Inhibitors/pharmacology , Caspases, Initiator/metabolism , Caspases/metabolism , Piperazines/chemistry , Piperazines/pharmacology , Caspase 1/chemistry , Caspases/chemistry , Caspases, Initiator/chemistry , Humans , Inflammation/drug therapy , Inflammation/enzymology , Molecular Docking Simulation , Pyrimidines/chemistry , Pyrimidines/pharmacology , Small Molecule Libraries/chemistry , Small Molecule Libraries/pharmacology
2.
Chem Res Toxicol ; 29(7): 1151-9, 2016 07 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27258437

ABSTRACT

Electrophilic reactive intermediates resulting from drug metabolism have been associated with toxicity and off-target effects and in some drug discovery programs trigger NO-GO decisions. Many botanicals and dietary supplements are replete with such reactive electrophiles, notably Michael acceptors, which have been demonstrated to elicit chemopreventive mechanisms; and Michael acceptors are gaining regulatory approval as contemporary cancer therapeutics. Identifying protein targets of these electrophiles is central to understanding potential therapeutic benefit and toxicity risk. NO-donating NSAID prodrugs (NO-NSAIDs) have been the focus of extensive clinical and preclinical studies in inflammation and cancer chemoprevention and therapy: a subset exemplified by pNO-ASA, induces chemopreventive mechanisms following bioactivation to an electrophilic quinone methide (QM) Michael acceptor. Having previously shown that these NO-independent, QM-donors activated Nrf2 via covalent modification of Keap-1, we demonstrate that components of canonical NF-κB signaling are also targets, leading to the inhibition of NF-κB signaling. Combining bio-orthogonal probes of QM-donor ASA prodrugs with mass spectrometric proteomics and pathway analysis, we proceeded to characterize the quinonome: the protein cellular targets of QM-modification by pNO-ASA and its ASA pro-drug congeners. Further comparison was made using a biorthogonal probe of the "bare-bones", Michael acceptor, and clinical anti-inflammatory agent, dimethyl fumarate, which we have shown to inhibit NF-κB signaling. Identified quinonome pathways include post-translational protein folding, cell-death regulation, protein transport, and glycolysis; and identified proteins included multiple heat shock elements, the latter functionally confirmed by demonstrating activation of heat shock response.


Subject(s)
NF-kappa B/metabolism , Prodrugs/pharmacokinetics , Quinones/pharmacokinetics , Activation, Metabolic , HT29 Cells , Humans , Mass Spectrometry , NF-E2-Related Factor 2/metabolism , Proteomics , Quantum Theory
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