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Structure-Based Design of Xanthine-Imidazopyridines and -Imidazothiazoles as Highly Potent and In Vivo Efficacious Tryptophan Hydroxylase Inhibitors.

Edgar Specker, Radoslaw Wesolowski, Anja Schütz, Susann Matthes, Keven Mallow et al.
Other Journal of medicinal chemistry 2023 8 citations

Study Design

Study Type
preclinical in vitro and in vivo study
Population
preclinical models (in vitro enzyme assays and in vivo animal models of peripheral serotonin attenuation and colorectal tumor growth); no human subjects
Intervention
Structure-Based Design of Xanthine-Imidazopyridines and -Imidazothiazoles as Highly Potent and In Vivo Efficacious Tryptophan Hydroxylase Inhibitors. not specified for humans; preclinical doses in animal models
Comparator
vehicle control; earlier-generation TPH inhibitors
Primary Outcome
TPH1 inhibition in periphery, peripheral serotonin attenuation, colorectal tumor growth inhibition
Effect Direction
Positive
Risk of Bias
Unclear

Abstract

Tryptophan hydroxylases catalyze the first and rate-limiting step in the biosynthesis of serotonin, a well-known neurotransmitter that plays an important role in multiple physiological functions. A reduction of serotonin levels, especially in the brain, can cause dysregulation leading to depression or insomnia. In contrast, overproduction of peripheral serotonin is associated with symptoms like carcinoid syndrome and pulmonary arterial hypertension. Recently, we developed a class of TPH inhibitors based on xanthine-benzimidazoles, characterized by a tripartite-binding mode spanning the binding sites of the cosubstrate pterin and the substrate tryptophan and by chelation of the catalytic iron ion. Herein, we describe the structure-based development of a second generation of xanthine-imidiazopyridines and -imidazothiazoles designed to inhibit TPH1 in the periphery while preventing the interaction with TPH2 in the brain. Lead compound 32 (TPT-004) shows superior pharmacokinetic and pharmacodynamic properties as well as efficacy in preclinical models of peripheral serotonin attenuation and colorectal tumor growth.

TL;DR

A structure-based development of a second generation of xanthine-imidiazopyridines and -imidazothiazoles designed to inhibit TPH1 in the periphery while preventing the interaction with TPH2 in the brain is described.

Used In Evidence Reviews