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Evaluation of Synthetic Cytochrome P(450)-Mimetic Metalloporphyrins To Facilitate “Biomimetic” Biotransformation of a Series of mGlu(5) Allosteric Ligands

[Image: see text] Allosteric ligands within a given chemotype can have the propensity to display a wide range of pharmacology, as well as unexpected changes in GPCR subtype selectivity, typically mediated by single-atom modifications to the ligand. Due to the unexpected nature of these “molecular sw...

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Autores principales: Presley, Christopher C., Perry, Charles K., Childress, Elizabeth S., Mulder, Matthew J., Luscombe, Vincent B., Rodriguez, Alice L., Niswender, Colleen M., Conn, P. Jeffrey, Lindsley, Craig W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: American Chemical Society 2019
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6690571/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31460402
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b02017
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author Presley, Christopher C.
Perry, Charles K.
Childress, Elizabeth S.
Mulder, Matthew J.
Luscombe, Vincent B.
Rodriguez, Alice L.
Niswender, Colleen M.
Conn, P. Jeffrey
Lindsley, Craig W.
author_facet Presley, Christopher C.
Perry, Charles K.
Childress, Elizabeth S.
Mulder, Matthew J.
Luscombe, Vincent B.
Rodriguez, Alice L.
Niswender, Colleen M.
Conn, P. Jeffrey
Lindsley, Craig W.
author_sort Presley, Christopher C.
collection PubMed
description [Image: see text] Allosteric ligands within a given chemotype can have the propensity to display a wide range of pharmacology, as well as unexpected changes in GPCR subtype selectivity, typically mediated by single-atom modifications to the ligand. Due to the unexpected nature of these “molecular switches”, chemotypes with this property are typically abandoned in lead optimization. Recently, we have found that in vivo oxidative metabolism by CYP(450)s can also engender molecular switches within allosteric ligands, changing the mode of pharmacology and leading to unwanted toxicity. We required a higher-throughput approach to assess in vivo metabolic molecular switches, and we turned to a “synthetic liver”, a 96 well kit of biomimetic catalysts (e.g., metalloporphyrins) to rapidly survey a broad panel of synthetic CYP(450)s’ ability to oxidize/“metabolize” an mGlu(5) PAM (VU0403602) known to undergo an in vivo CYP(450)-mediated molecular switch. While the synthetic CYP(450)s did generate a number of oxidative “metabolites” at known “hot spots”, several of which proved to be pure mGlu(5) PAMs comparable in potency to the parent, the known CYP(450)-mediated in vivo ago-PAM metabolite, namely, VU0453103, was not formed. Thus, this technology platform has potential to identify hot spots for oxidative metabolism and produce active metabolites of small-molecule ligands in a high-throughput, scalable manner.
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spelling pubmed-66905712019-08-27 Evaluation of Synthetic Cytochrome P(450)-Mimetic Metalloporphyrins To Facilitate “Biomimetic” Biotransformation of a Series of mGlu(5) Allosteric Ligands Presley, Christopher C. Perry, Charles K. Childress, Elizabeth S. Mulder, Matthew J. Luscombe, Vincent B. Rodriguez, Alice L. Niswender, Colleen M. Conn, P. Jeffrey Lindsley, Craig W. ACS Omega [Image: see text] Allosteric ligands within a given chemotype can have the propensity to display a wide range of pharmacology, as well as unexpected changes in GPCR subtype selectivity, typically mediated by single-atom modifications to the ligand. Due to the unexpected nature of these “molecular switches”, chemotypes with this property are typically abandoned in lead optimization. Recently, we have found that in vivo oxidative metabolism by CYP(450)s can also engender molecular switches within allosteric ligands, changing the mode of pharmacology and leading to unwanted toxicity. We required a higher-throughput approach to assess in vivo metabolic molecular switches, and we turned to a “synthetic liver”, a 96 well kit of biomimetic catalysts (e.g., metalloporphyrins) to rapidly survey a broad panel of synthetic CYP(450)s’ ability to oxidize/“metabolize” an mGlu(5) PAM (VU0403602) known to undergo an in vivo CYP(450)-mediated molecular switch. While the synthetic CYP(450)s did generate a number of oxidative “metabolites” at known “hot spots”, several of which proved to be pure mGlu(5) PAMs comparable in potency to the parent, the known CYP(450)-mediated in vivo ago-PAM metabolite, namely, VU0453103, was not formed. Thus, this technology platform has potential to identify hot spots for oxidative metabolism and produce active metabolites of small-molecule ligands in a high-throughput, scalable manner. American Chemical Society 2019-07-26 /pmc/articles/PMC6690571/ /pubmed/31460402 http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b02017 Text en Copyright © 2019 American Chemical Society This is an open access article published under an ACS AuthorChoice License (http://pubs.acs.org/page/policy/authorchoice_termsofuse.html) , which permits copying and redistribution of the article or any adaptations for non-commercial purposes.
spellingShingle Presley, Christopher C.
Perry, Charles K.
Childress, Elizabeth S.
Mulder, Matthew J.
Luscombe, Vincent B.
Rodriguez, Alice L.
Niswender, Colleen M.
Conn, P. Jeffrey
Lindsley, Craig W.
Evaluation of Synthetic Cytochrome P(450)-Mimetic Metalloporphyrins To Facilitate “Biomimetic” Biotransformation of a Series of mGlu(5) Allosteric Ligands
title Evaluation of Synthetic Cytochrome P(450)-Mimetic Metalloporphyrins To Facilitate “Biomimetic” Biotransformation of a Series of mGlu(5) Allosteric Ligands
title_full Evaluation of Synthetic Cytochrome P(450)-Mimetic Metalloporphyrins To Facilitate “Biomimetic” Biotransformation of a Series of mGlu(5) Allosteric Ligands
title_fullStr Evaluation of Synthetic Cytochrome P(450)-Mimetic Metalloporphyrins To Facilitate “Biomimetic” Biotransformation of a Series of mGlu(5) Allosteric Ligands
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of Synthetic Cytochrome P(450)-Mimetic Metalloporphyrins To Facilitate “Biomimetic” Biotransformation of a Series of mGlu(5) Allosteric Ligands
title_short Evaluation of Synthetic Cytochrome P(450)-Mimetic Metalloporphyrins To Facilitate “Biomimetic” Biotransformation of a Series of mGlu(5) Allosteric Ligands
title_sort evaluation of synthetic cytochrome p(450)-mimetic metalloporphyrins to facilitate “biomimetic” biotransformation of a series of mglu(5) allosteric ligands
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6690571/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31460402
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acsomega.9b02017
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