A series of digitalis-like compounds with a 17-aminoalkoxyiminoalkyl or -alkenyl substituent was synthesized and evaluated for inhibition of Na(+),K(+)-ATPase and for inotropic activity. The highest inhibition was found with compounds having the substituent in configuration 17beta and the amino group at a distance of 6 or 7 bonds from C(17) of the digitoxigenin skeleton. The presence of the oxime function strengthens the interaction with the receptor, more if alpha,beta-unsaturated, thus mimicking the electronic situation of the unsaturated lactone in natural digitalis compounds. The most active compounds showed Na(+),K(+)-ATPase inhibitory potencies (IC(50)) 17-25 times higher than the standards digitoxigenin and digoxin and 3-11 times higher inotropic potencies (EC(50)) in isolated guinea pig left atria. These features are supported by a molecular model suggesting the possible interactions of the groups described above with particular amino acid residues in the H1-H2 domains of Na(+),K(+)-ATPase. Some interactions are the classical ones already described in the literature; a new, very strong interaction of the basic group with the Cys138 was found and adds new possibilities to design compounds interacting with this region of the receptor. The most interesting compounds were also studied in vivo in the anesthetized guinea pig for evaluating their inotropic effect versus the lethal dose. Compounds 9 and 12 showed a slightly higher safety ratio than digoxin and deserve further evaluation.
The design, synthesis, and biological properties of novel inhibitors of the Na(+),K(+)-ATPase as potential positive inotropic compounds are reported. Following our model of superposition between cassaine and digitoxigenin, digitalis-like activity has been elicited from a non-digitalis steroidal structure by suitable modifications of the 5alpha,14alpha-androstane skeleton. The strong hydrophobic interaction of the digitalis or cassaine polycyclic cores can be effectively obtained with the androstane skeleton taken in a reversed orientation. Thus, oxidation of C-6 and introduction in the C-3 position of the potent pharmacophoric group recently introduced by us, in the 17 position of the digitalis skeleton, namely, O-(omega-aminoalkyl)oxime, led to a series of substituted androstanes able to inhibit the Na(+),K(+)-ATPase, most of them with an IC(50) in the low micromolar level, and to induce a positive inotropic effect in guinea pig. Within this series, androstane-3,6,17-trione (E,Z)-3-(2-aminoethyl)oxime (22b, PST 2744) induced a strong positive inotropic effect while being less arrhythmogenic than digoxin, when the two compounds were compared at equiinotropic doses.
A new three-dimensional model for the relative binding mode of cassaine 1 and digitoxigenin 2 at the digitalis receptor site is proposed on the basis of the structural and conformational similarities among 1, 2 and its 14,15-seco analogues 3 and 4. Accordingly, the speculation that also 17alpha-substituted derivatives of the digitalis 5beta,14beta-androstane skeleton could efficiently bind to the Na+,K+-ATPase receptor is put forward and verified through the synthesis of some related compounds. The binding affinity shown by 2-(N,N-dimethylamino)ethyl 3beta, 14-dihydroxy-5beta,14beta-androstane-17alpha-acrylate 6 (IC50 = 5.89 microM) and, much more significantly, by the corresponding 14, 15-seco-14-oxo derivative 9 (IC50 = 0.12 microM) substantiates the new hypothesis and opens new prospects to the design of novel inhibitors of Na+,K+-ATPase as potential positive inotropic compounds.
A series of 17 beta-(hydrazonomethyl)-5 beta-androstane-3, beta,14 beta-diol derivatives was synthesized and evaluated in the displacement of [3H]ouabain binding from Na+,K(+)-ATPase. The data were explored with multiple linear regression and partial least-squares to find possible quantitatives structure-activity relationships. Good correlations were found between binding to the receptor and van der Waals volumes or molar refractivities of the 17 beta-hydrazonomethyl substituents and pKa values of the compounds. Equivalent results were obtained using the proton affinity (calculated using MOPAC) of the hydrazone residues instead of experimental pKa. As basicity or related electronic factors of the substituents explain a significant portion of the observed changes in the activity, an ion-pair interaction between a carboxylate residue of the enzyme and the protonated 17 beta-hydrazonomethyl group, as postulated by Thomas, plays an important role in the interaction of the ligand to the Na+,K(+)-ATPase receptor.
A series of dihydro-1H-pyrrolo[1,2-a]imidazole-2,5(3H,6H)-diones were synthesized. These bicylic derivatives contain both the 2-pyrrolidinone and 4-imidazolidinone nuclei, already recognized as important for cognition enhancing activity. In addition, these structures maintain the backbone of piracetam and oxiracetam with the acetamide side chain restricted in a folded conformation. Their ability to reverse scopolamine-induced amnesia was assessed in a one trial, step-through, passive avoidance paradigm. The main features observed are a potent antiamnestic activity after ip administration (minimal effective dose being between 0.3 and 1 mg/kg ip for most compounds), the presence of a bell-shaped dose-response curve and, generally, a reduction of biological activity after po administration. However, the unsubstituted compound (15, dimiracetam) shows no evidence of a bell-shaped dose-response curve and completely retains activity when given orally, being 10-30 times more potent than the reference drug oxiracetam.
We report the synthesis and biological properties of novel inhibitors of the Na(+),K(+)-ATPase as positive inotropic compounds. Following our previously described model from which Istaroxime was generated, the 5alpha,14alpha-androstane skeleton was used as a scaffold to study the space around the basic chain of our lead compound. Some compounds demonstrated higher potencies than Istaroxime on the receptor and the (E)-3-[(R)-3-pyrrolidinyl]oxime derivative, 15, was the most potent; as further confirmation of our model, the E isomers of the oxime are more potent than the Z form. The compounds tested in the guinea pig model induced positive inotropic effects, which are correlated to the in vitro inhibitory potency on the Na(+),K(+)-ATPase. The finding that all tested compounds resulted less proarrhythmogenic than digoxin, a currently clinically used positive inotropic agent, suggests that this could be a feature of the 3-aminoalkyloxime derivative class of 5alpha,14alpha-androstane.
The synthesis and binding affinities to the digitalis Na(+),K(+)-ATPase receptor of a series of 3 beta,14 beta-dihydroxy-5 beta-androstane and 3 beta-hydroxy-14-oxoseco-D-5 beta-androstane derivatives bearing a 17 alpha-(aminoalkoxy)imino chain are reported; some derivatives were also studied for their inotropic activity. Our recently proposed model of interaction of molecules with the digitalis receptor was used to design these compounds. On that basis, the possibility to design novel potent inhibitors of Na(+),K(+)-ATPase without being constrained by the stereochemistry of the classical digitalis skeleton in the D-ring region was predicted. The binding affinities of the most potent compounds in the two series, (EZ)-17 alpha-[2-[(2-aminoethoxy)imino]ethyl]-5 beta-androstane-3 beta,14 beta-diol (6f) and (EZ)-3 beta-hydroxy-17 alpha-[2-[(2-aminoethoxy)imino]ethyl]-14,15-seco-5 beta-androstan-14-one (24c) are higher than that of the potent natural compound digitoxigenin, despite the unusual alpha-exit of the substituent in position 17 of 6f or the disruption of the D-ring in 24c. These results further support the validity of our recently proposed model of binding at the digitalis receptor. Results of the inotropic tests on guinea pig atrium deserve further investigation on the pharmacological profile of these derivatives.
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