4.7 Article

Designing Nonsaccharide, Allosteric Activators of Antithrombin for Accelerated Inhibition of Factor Xa

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 54, Issue 17, Pages 6125-6138

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jm2008387

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [HL099420, HL090586]

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Antithrombin is a key regulator of coagulation and prime target of heparins, clinically used anticoagulants. Heparins induce a two-step conformational activation of antithrombin, a process that has remained challenging to target with molecules devoid of the antithrombin-binding pentasaccharide DEFGH. Computational screening of a focused library led to the design of two tetra-sulfated N-arylacyl tetrahydroisoquinoline variants as potential nonsaccharide activators of antithrombin. A high yielding synthetic scheme based on Horner-Wadsworth-Emmons or Pictet-Spengler reactions was developed to facilitate the functionalization of the tetrahydoisoquinoline ring, which upon further amidation, deprotection, and sulfation gave the targeted nonsaccharide activators. Spectrofluorometric measurement of affinity displayed antithrombin binding affinities in the low to high micromolar range at pH 6.0, I 0.05, 25 degrees C. Measurement of second-order rate constants of antithrombin inhibition of factor Xa in the presence and absence of the designed activators showed antithrombin activation in the range of 8-80-fold in the pH 6.0 buffer. This work puts forward 20c, a novel tetra-sulfated N-arylacyl tetrahydroisoquinoline-based molecule, that activates AT only 3.8-fold less than that achieved with DEFGH, suggesting a strong possibility of rationally designing sulfated organic molecules as clinically relevant AT activators.

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