Four years ago we highlighted a
paper from LEO Pharma describing inhibitors of the kinase JAK1, which is
implicated in a host of inflammatory conditions. Although they developed low
nanomolar inhibitors, these showed phototoxicity, which was unacceptable for
the topical applications the researchers had in mind. The molecules were also
not selective against closely related JAK2, whose inhibition can cause neutropenia
and anemia. A recent paper in J. Med. Chem from Andrea Ritźen and
collaborators at LEO and GVK Biosciences describes a more selective series.
As mentioned previously, hits came from about
500 fragments screened against JAK2 using SPR and validated in a biochemical
assay against JAK1. Most fragments had similar activities against both proteins,
but compound 1 was moderately selective for the latter. Initial SAR around the
fragment revealed that the methyl group was essential to activity and that methylating
the pyrazole nitrogen atoms also obliterated binding. The molecule looks like a
hinge-binder, but because it can assume four different tautomers docking was
difficult. Fortunately, replacing the difluoromethyl substituent with a phenyl
ring in compound 6 improved affinity and led to a crystal structure, which
showed the methyl group making lipophilic interactions with the protein.
The crystal structure also revealed
that the phenyl ring didn’t quite fill the lipophilic ribose-binding pocket, so
the researchers replaced this with the more three-dimensional cyclohexyl
substituent in compound 7, which yielded a ten-fold improvement in biochemical
potency as well as the first cellular activity. The philosophy behind further
optimization is described eloquently: “in the spirit of fragment-based drug
design – start small and make every added atom count – small substituents with
balanced polarity were added to the cyclohexyl analogue 7.” Unfortunately,
although several polar substituents introduced onto the cyclohexyl ring improved
biochemical potency, they did not do much for cell activity.
Replacing the cyclohexane moiety
of compound 7 with a norbornane led to compound 11, which was not only more potent
against JAK1 but also less lipophilic and more soluble. The researchers then
borrowed a nitrile from an approved pan-JAK inhibitor, leading to compound 40.
This molecule has low nanomolar activity against JAK1 and is somewhat selective
against closely related JAK2, JAK3, and TYK2. It is quite selective against a
panel of 50 other kinases and does not inhibit several cytochrome P450 enzymes or
bind to hERG. Oral bioavailability in rats is fairly low, but this should not be
a problem for topical indications.
As noted in the paper, the researchers
were able to benefit from published work from multiple other companies that has
led to five approved JAK inhibitors plus several more in clinical development. While
another JAK inhibitor may not be the most pressing medical need, this paper is
still a nice example of structure-based design that illustrates several points.
First, ligand efficiency was improved during the optimization process, in
contrast to common perceptions. Second, fragment selectivity was also improved
during optimization. And finally, although this sounds banal, it matters what
you have in your fragment library: had the des-methyl version of compound 1
been the only representative of this core in the LEO library the researchers
would not have discovered it. In other words, while simplifying your fragments will
decrease molecular complexity, sometimes a single methyl group can make all the
difference.
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