Johns Hopkins Drug Discovery, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Department of Molecular and Comparative Pathobiology, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland.
Br J Pharmacol. 2019 Oct;176(19):3857-3870. doi: 10.1111/bph.14789. Epub 2019 Sep 4.
Extracellular vesicles (EVs) are constitutively shed from cells and released by various stimuli. Their protein and RNA cargo are modified by the stimulus, and in disease conditions can carry pathological cargo involved in disease progression. Neutral sphingomyelinase 2 (nSMase2) is a major regulator in at least one of several independent routes of EV biogenesis, and its inhibition is a promising new therapeutic approach for neurological disorders. Unfortunately, known inhibitors exhibit μM potency, poor physicochemical properties, and/or limited brain penetration. Here, we sought to identify a drug-like inhibitor of nSMase2.
We conducted a human nSMase2 high throughput screen (>365,000 compounds). Selected hits were optimized focusing on potency, selectivity, metabolic stability, pharmacokinetics, and ability to inhibit EV release in vitro and in vivo.
We identified phenyl(R)-(1-(3-(3,4-dimethoxyphenyl)-2,6-dimethylimidazo[1,2-b]pyridazin-8-yl)pyrrolidin-3-yl)-carbamate (PDDC), a potent (pIC = 6.57) and selective non-competitive inhibitor of nSMase2. PDDC was metabolically stable, with excellent oral bioavailability (%F = 88) and brain penetration (AUC /AUC = 0.60). PDDC dose-dependently (pEC = 5.5) inhibited release of astrocyte-derived extracellular vesicles (ADEV). In an in vivo inflammatory brain injury model, PDDC robustly inhibited ADEV release and the associated peripheral immunological response. A closely related inactive PDDC analogue was ineffective.
PDDC is a structurally novel, potent, orally available, and brain penetrant inhibitor of nSMase2. PDDC inhibited release of ADEVs in tissue culture and in vivo. PDDC is actively being tested in animal models of neurological disease and, along with closely related analogues, is being considered for clinical translation.
细胞不断分泌细胞外囊泡(EVs)并受各种刺激释放。其蛋白质和 RNA 货物受刺激修饰,在疾病条件下可携带与疾病进展相关的病理货物。中性鞘磷脂酶 2(nSMase2)是至少一种 EV 生物发生独立途径的主要调节剂,其抑制是治疗神经退行性疾病的一种有前途的新方法。不幸的是,已知的抑制剂表现出 μM 效力、较差的理化性质和/或有限的脑穿透性。在这里,我们试图鉴定 nSMase2 的药物样抑制剂。
我们进行了人类 nSMase2 高通量筛选(>365,000 种化合物)。选择的命中化合物进行优化,重点是效力、选择性、代谢稳定性、药代动力学以及体外和体内抑制 EV 释放的能力。
我们鉴定出苯基(R)-(1-(3-(3,4-二甲氧基苯基)-2,6-二甲基咪唑并[1,2-b]哒嗪-8-基)吡咯烷-3-基)-氨基甲酸酯(PDDC),这是一种有效的(pIC = 6.57)和选择性的非竞争性 nSMase2 抑制剂。PDDC 代谢稳定,具有极好的口服生物利用度(%F = 88)和脑穿透性(AUC / AUC = 0.60)。PDDC 剂量依赖性(pEC = 5.5)抑制星形胶质细胞衍生的细胞外囊泡(ADEV)的释放。在体内炎症性脑损伤模型中,PDDC 可有效抑制 ADEV 释放及其相关的外周免疫反应。结构上密切相关的无活性 PDDC 类似物无效。
PDDC 是一种结构新颖的、有效的、可口服和脑穿透的 nSMase2 抑制剂。PDDC 抑制组织培养和体内 ADEV 的释放。PDDC 正在神经退行性疾病的动物模型中进行积极测试,并且与结构上密切相关的类似物一起正在考虑临床转化。