Article

Discovery of a potent, selective, and orally bioavailable pyridinyl-pyrimidine phthalazine aurora kinase inhibitor.

Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Amgen Inc., 360 Binney Street, Cambridge, Massachusetts 02142 and Amgen Inc., One Amgen Center Drive, Thousand Oaks, California 91320, USA.
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry (impact factor: 4.8). 09/2010; 53(17):6368-77. DOI:10.1021/jm100394y
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT The discovery of aurora kinases as essential regulators of cell division has led to intense interest in identifying small molecule aurora kinase inhibitors for the potential treatment of cancer. A high-throughput screening effort identified pyridinyl-pyrimidine 6a as a moderately potent dual inhibitor of aurora kinases -A and -B. Optimization of this hit resulted in an anthranilamide lead (6j) that possessed improved enzyme and cellular activity and exhibited a high level of kinase selectivity. However, this anthranilamide and subsequent analogues suffered from a lack of oral bioavailability. Converting the internally hydrogen-bonded six-membered pseudo-ring of the anthranilamide to a phthalazine (8a-b) led to a dramatic improvement in oral bioavailability (38-61%F) while maintaining the potency and selectivity characteristics of the anthranilamide series. In a COLO 205 tumor pharmacodynamic assay measuring phosphorylation of the aurora-B substrate histone H3 at serine 10 (p-histone H3), oral administration of 8b at 50 mg/kg demonstrated significant reduction in tumor p-histone H3 for at least 6 h.

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Keywords

8a-b
 
aurora kinases
 
aurora kinases -A
 
aurora-B substrate histone H3
 
cell division
 
cellular activity
 
high-throughput screening effort
 
intense interest
 
internally hydrogen-bonded six-membered pseudo-ring
 
moderately potent dual inhibitor
 
oral administration
 
oral bioavailability
 
p-histone H3
 
potential treatment
 
pyridinyl-pyrimidine 6a
 
selectivity characteristics
 
serine 10
 
small molecule aurora kinase inhibitors
 
subsequent analogues
 
tumor p-histone H3