We previously reported the discovery of substituted benzimidazole fusion inhibitors with nanomolar activity against respiratory syncytial virus (Andries, K.; et al. Antiviral Res. 2003, 60, 209-219). A lead compound of the series was selected for preclinical evaluation. This drug candidate, JNJ-2408068 (formerly R170591, 1), showed long tissue retention times in several species (rat, dog, and monkey), creating cause for concern. We herein describe the optimization program to develop compounds with improved properties in terms of tissue retention. We have identified the aminoethyl-piperidine moiety as being responsible for the long tissue retention time of 1. We have investigated the replacement or the modification of this group, and we suggest that the pKa of this part of the molecules influences both the antiviral activity and the pharmacokinetic profile. We were able to identify new respiratory syncytial virus inhibitors with shorter half-lives in lung tissue.
The influx of leukocytes (eosinophils, lymphocytes, and monocytes) into the airways and their production of proinflammatory cytokines contribute to the severity of allergic asthma. We describe here the synthesis and pharmacological evaluation of a series of triazinylphenylalkylthiazolecarboxylic acid esters that were designed to act as lung-specific antedrugs and inhibitors of the production of interleukin (IL)-5, a primary eosinophil-activating and proinflammatory cytokine. Closer examination of the hydroxypropyl ester, 15, indicated its high metabolic stability (t(1/2) > 240 min) in human lung S9 fraction but rapid conversion (t(1/2) = 15 min) into the pharmacologically inactive carboxylic acid by human liver preparations. In stimulated human whole blood cultures, 15 reduced not only the production of IL-5 (IC(50) = 78 nM) but also the biosynthesis of the monocyte chemotactic proteins MCP-1 (IC(50) = 220 nM), MCP-2 (IC(50) = 580 nM), and MCP-3 (IC(50) = 80 nM). In vivo, intratracheal administration of 15 (6 mg/animal) to allergic sheep, either before (-4 h) or after (+1.5 h) the pulmonary allergen challenge, completely abrogated the late-phase airway response and reduced the bronchial hyperreactivity to inhaled carbachol.
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