4.6 Article

Development of Non-Ethoxypropanoic Acid Type Cryptochrome Inhibitors with Circadian Molecular Clock-Enhancing Activity by Bioisosteric Replacement

Journal

PHARMACEUTICALS
Volume 14, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ph14060496

Keywords

circadian rhythm; circadian clock; cryptochrome inhibitor; bioisosteric replacement

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of Korea (NRF) - Korean government (MSIT) [2015M3A9E7029176, 2019M3C7A1032764, 2020R1C1C1013670, 2020R1A5A2017323]
  2. 4th BK21 project - Korean Ministry of Education [5199990614732]
  3. Korea University Research Grant
  4. National Research Foundation of Korea [2020R1C1C1013670, 2020R1A5A2017323, 2019M3C7A1032764, 2015M3A9E7029176] Funding Source: Korea Institute of Science & Technology Information (KISTI), National Science & Technology Information Service (NTIS)

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Non-ethoxypropanoic acid-type inhibitors were developed as potent enhancers of E-box-mediated transcription, showing promising metabolic and pharmacokinetic profiles. These inhibitors directly bound to both CRY1 and 2, and exhibited significant effects on molecular circadian rhythmicity as circadian clock-enhancers.
Circadian dysfunction is closely associated with an increased risk of various diseases. Considering that molecular clock machinery serves as an intrinsic time-keeping system underlying the circadian rhythm of biological processes, the modulation of the molecular clock machinery is an attractive therapeutic target with novel mechanisms of action. Based on the previous structure-activity relationship study of small molecule cryptochrome (CRY) inhibitors possessing an ethoxypropanoic acid moiety, non-ethoxypropanoic acid-type inhibitors have been developed by bioisosteric replacement. They were evaluated as potent and effective enhancers of E-box-mediated transcription, and, in particular, ester 5d and its hydrolysis product 2d exhibited desirable metabolic and pharmacokinetic profiles as promising drug candidates. Compound 2d directly bound to both CRY1 and 2 in surface plasmon resonance analyses, suggesting that the molecular target is CRY. Effects of compound 5d and 2d on suppressive action of CRY1 on CLOCK:BMAL1-activated E-box-LUC reporter activity revealed that both compounds inhibited the negative feedback actions of CRY on CLOCK:BMAL1. Most importantly, compounds 5d and 2d exhibited significant effects on molecular circadian rhythmicity to be considered circadian clock-enhancers, distinct from the previously developed CRY inhibitors possessing an ethoxypropanoic acid moiety.

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