Rebecca and John Moores UCSD Cancer Center (T.H., B.C., S.Y., H.B.C., M.Ch., D.A.C.) and Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California (C.D.C., M.Co.).
Rebecca and John Moores UCSD Cancer Center (T.H., B.C., S.Y., H.B.C., M.Ch., D.A.C.) and Department of Medicine, University of California San Diego, La Jolla, California (C.D.C., M.Co.)
J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2014 Aug;350(2):330-40. doi: 10.1124/jpet.114.214312. Epub 2014 Jun 3.
Toll-like receptor (TLR) stimulation has been implicated as a major contributor to chronic inflammation. Among these receptors, TLR4 has been described as a key regulator of endogenous inflammation and has been proposed as a therapeutic target. Previously, we discovered by high-throughput screening a group of substituted pyrimido[5,4-b]indoles that activated a nuclear factor-κB reporter in THP-1 human monocytic cells. A biologically active hit compound was resynthesized, and derivatives were prepared to assess structure-activity relationships. The derived compounds activated cells in a TLR4/myeloid differentiation protein 2 (MD2)-dependent and CD14-independent manner, using the myeloid differentiation primary response 88 and Toll/IL-1 receptor domain-containing adapter-inducing interferon-β pathways. Two lead compounds, 1Z105 and 1Z88, were selected for further analysis based on favorable biologic properties and lack of toxicity. In vivo pharmacokinetics indicated that 1Z105 was orally bioavailable, whereas 1Z88 was not. Oral or parenteral doses of 1Z105 and 1Z88 induced undetectable or negligible levels of circulating cytokines and did not induce hepatotoxicity when administered to galactosamine-conditioned mice, indicating good safety profiles. Both compounds were very effective in preventing lethal liver damage in lipopolysaccharide treated galatosamine-conditioned mice. Orally administered 1Z105 and parenteral 1Z88 prevented arthritis in an autoantibody-driven murine model. Hence, these low molecular weight molecules that target TLR4/MD2 were well tolerated and effective in reducing target organ damage in two different mouse models of sterile inflammation.
Toll 样受体(TLR)刺激被认为是慢性炎症的主要原因。在这些受体中,TLR4 被描述为内源性炎症的关键调节剂,并被提议作为治疗靶点。先前,我们通过高通量筛选发现了一组取代的嘧啶并[5,4-b]吲哚,它们在 THP-1 人单核细胞中激活核因子-κB 报告基因。重新合成了具有生物活性的命中化合物,并制备了衍生物以评估结构-活性关系。衍生的化合物以 TLR4/髓样分化蛋白 2(MD2)依赖性和 CD14 非依赖性方式激活细胞,使用髓样分化初级反应 88 和 Toll/IL-1 受体域包含衔接诱导干扰素-β途径。根据有利的生物学特性和缺乏毒性,选择了两种先导化合物 1Z105 和 1Z88 进行进一步分析。体内药代动力学表明 1Z105 可口服生物利用,而 1Z88 则不可。口服或肠外给予 1Z105 和 1Z88 诱导循环细胞因子水平可检测或可忽略不计,并且在给予半乳糖胺调理的小鼠时不会引起肝毒性,表明安全性良好。两种化合物在给予脂多糖处理的半乳糖胺调理的小鼠时非常有效地预防致命性肝损伤。口服给予 1Z105 和肠外给予 1Z88 可预防自身抗体驱动的小鼠模型中的关节炎。因此,这些靶向 TLR4/MD2 的低分子量分子具有良好的耐受性,并能有效减少两种不同无菌性炎症小鼠模型中靶器官的损伤。