The present invention relates to novel cyclic or constrained acyclic compounds which modulate the activity of G protein-coupled receptors and are useful in the treatment of conditions mediated by G protein-coupled receptors, for example, inflammatory conditions.
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34. A compound which is an antagonist of the c5a receptor, and has the formula IV:
##STR00013##
where A is any common or uncommon, basic, charged amino acid side chain which serves to position a positively charged group in this position;
B is a non-aromatic amino acid, and
C is any common or uncommon, hydrophobic amino acid side chain which serves to position any alkyl, aromatic or other group in this position; and
D is any common or uncommon, aromatic amino acid which serve to position an aromatic side-chain in this position, and has the structure:
##STR00014##
where Z is indole, indole methyl, benzyl, benzene, naphthyl, naphthyl methyl, or a derivative thereof; and
R is h or an alkyl, aromatic, acyl or aromatic-acyl group;
E is any amino acid other than tryptophan and homotryptophan, and
F is the side chain of a D- or L-amino acid selected from the group consisting of arginine, homoarginine, lysine and homolysine.
1. A compound, which has antagonist activity against a c5a receptor, has no agonist activity against a c5a receptor, and has the general formula II:
##STR00008##
where A is h, alkyl, aryl, NH2, NHalkyl, N(alkyl)2, NHaryl or NHacyl;
B is an alkyl, aryl, phenyl, benzyl, naphthyl or indole group, or the side chain of a D- or L-amino acid selected from the group consisting of phenylalanine, homophenylalanine, tryptophan, homotryptophan, tyrosine, and homotyrosine;
C is the side chain of D-, L- or homo-amino acid selected from the group consisting of proline, alanine, leucine valine, isoleucine, arginine, histidine, aspartate, glutamate, glutamine, asparagine, lysine, tyrosine, phenylalanine, cyclohexylalanine, norleucine, tryptophan, cysteine and methionine;
D is the side chain of a D- or L-amino acid selected from the group consisting of cyclohexylalanine, homocyclohexylalanine, leucine, norleucine, homoleucine, homonorleucine and tryptophan;
E is the side chain of a D- or L-amino acid selected from the group consisting of tryptophan and homotryptophan;
F is the side chain of a D- or L-amino acid selected from the group consisting of arginine,
homoarginine, lysine and homolysine or is one of the following side-chains
##STR00009##
or another mimetic of an arginine side chain,
where
X is NCN, NNO2, CHNO2 or NSO2NH2;
n is an integer from 1 to 4, and
R1 is h or an alkyl, aryl, CN, NH2, OH, —CO—CH2CH3, —CO—CH3, —CO—CH2CH2CH3, —CO—CH2Ph, or —CO-Ph; and
X1 is —(CH2)nNH— or (CH2)n—S—, —(CH2)2O—, —(CH2)3O—, —(CH2)3—, —(CH2)4—, or —CH2COCHRNH—, where R is the side chain of any common or uncommon amino acid, and
where n is an integer of from 1 to 4.
2. The compound according to
4. The compound according to
or another mimetic of an arginine side chain;
where
X is NCN, NNO2, CHNO2 or NSO2NH2;
n is an integer from 1 to 4, and
R1 is h or an alkyl, aryl, CN, NH2, OH, —CO—CH2CH3, —CO—CH3, —CO—CH2CH2CH3, —CO—CH2Ph, or —CO-Ph;
B is an indole, indole methyl, benzyl, phenyl, naphthyl, naphthyl methyl, cinnamyl group, or any other derivative of the aromatic group; and
C is D- or L-cyclohexylalanine (Cha), leucine, valine, isoleucine, phenylalanine, tryptophan or methionine.
5. The compound according to
Ac-Phe-[Lys-Pro-(dCha)-Trp-Arg] or Ac-Phe-[Orn-Pro-(dCha)-Trp-Arg]. 9. A composition comprising a compound according to
11. The composition according to
12. The composition according to
Ac-Phe-[Lys-Pro-(dCha)-Trp-Arg] or Ac-Phe-[Orn-Pro-(dCha)-Trp-Arg]. 16. The composition according to
F is one of the following side-chains
##STR00011##
or another mimetic of an arginine side chain;
where
X is NCN, NNO2, CHNO2 or NSO2NH2;
n is an integer from 1 to 4, and
R1 is h or an alkyl, aryl, CN, NH2, OH, —CO—CH2CH3, —CO—CH3, —CO—CH2CH2CH3, —CO—CH2Ph, or —CO-Ph;
B is an indole, indole methyl, benzyl, phenyl, naphthyl, naphthyl methyl, cinnamyl group, or any other derivative of the aromatic group; and
C is D- or L-cyclohexylalanine (Cha), leucine, valine, isoleucine, phenylalanine, tryptophan or methionine.
17. The composition according to
18. A method of antagonizing the activity of a c5a receptor on a cell, comprising contacting the cell with the compound of
20. The method according to
21. The method according to
Ac-Phe-[Lys-Pro-(dCha)-Trp-Arg] or Ac-Phe-[Orn-Pro-(dCha)-Trp-Arg]. 23. The method of
25. The method of
26. The method according to
F is one of the following side-chains
##STR00012##
or another mimetic of an arginine side chain;
where
X is NCN, NNO2, CHNO2 or NSO2NH2;
n is an integer from 1 to 4, and
R1 is h or an alkyl, aryl, CN, NH2, OH, —CO—CH2CH3, —CO—CH3, —CO—CH2CH2CH3, —CO—CH2Ph, or —CO-Ph;
B is an indole, indole methyl, benzyl, phenyl, naphthyl, naphthyl methyl, cinnamyl group, or any other derivative of the aromatic group; and
C is D- or L-cyclohexylalanine (Cha), leucine, valine, isoleucine, phenylalanine, tryptophan or methionine.
27. The method according to
28. A method of treating inflammatory arthritis mediated by a c5a receptor, comprising the step of administering an effective amount of a compound according to
29. The method of
30. The method of
31. A method of treating inflammatory arthritis, comprising the step of administering an effective amount of a compound according to
32. The method of
33. The method of
35. A composition comprising a compound according to
36. A method of agonizing the activity of a c5a receptor on a cell comprising contacting the cell with the compound of
37. The method of
38. The method of
39. A method of treating inflammatory arthritis mediated by a c5a receptor, comprising the step of administering an effective amount of a compound according to
40. The method of
41. The method of
42. A method of treating inflammatory arthritis, comprising the step of administering an effective amount of a compound according to
43. The method of
44. The method of
46. A composition comprising the compound of
47. A method of agonizing the activity of a c5a receptor on a cell comprising contacting the cell with the compound of
48. The method of
49. The method of
50. A method of treating inflammatory arthritis, comprising the step of administering an effective amount of a compound according to
51. The method of
52. A method of treating inflammatory arthritis mediated by a c5a receptor, comprising the step of administering an effective amount of a compound according to
53. The method of
54. The method of
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This invention relates to novel cyclic compounds which have the ability to modulate the activity of G protein-coupled receptors. The invention provides both agonists and antagonists. In preferred embodiments, the invention provides cyclic peptidic and cyclic or non-cyclic non-peptidic antagonists or agonists of C5a. The compounds of the invention are both potent and selective, and are useful in the treatment of a variety of inflammatory conditions.
Activation of human complement, a system of plasma proteins involved in immunological defence against infection and injury, contributes significantly to the pathogenesis of numerous acute and chronic diseases. In particular, the complement protein C5a has been extensively investigated. For general reviews, see Whaley (1987), and Sim (1993). Table 1 provides a summary of known roles of C5a in disease.
During host defence, the complement system of plasma proteins initiates inflammatory and cellular immune responses to stimuli such as infectious organisms (bacteria, viruses, parasites), chemical or physical injury, radiation or neoplasia. Complement is activated through a complex cascade of interrelated proteolytic events that produce multiple bioactive peptides, some of which (eg. anaphylatoxins C3a and C5a) interact with cellular components to propagate inflammatory processes. Complement activation, either by the classical pathway, after antigen-antibody (Ag/Ab) binding, or by the antibody-independent alternate pathway, ends with a terminal sequence in which protein C5 is proteolytically cleaved by C5 convertase to C5a and C5b. The latter facilitates assembly of a “membrane attack complex” that punches holes in membranes of target cells such as bacteria, leading to leakage, lysis and cell death. Steps in the cascade are tightly regulated to avoid stepwise amplification of proteolysis by sequentially formed proteases. If these regulatory mechanisms become inefficient, protracted activation of complement can result, causing enhanced inflammatory responses as in autoimmune diseases.
Although the broad features of the complement system and its activation are known, mechanistic details remain poorly understood. A principal and very potent mediator of inflammatory responses is the plasma glycoprotein C5a, which interacts with specific surface receptors (C5aR) on mast cells, neutrophils, monocytes, macrophages, non-myeloid cells, and vascular endothelial cells (Gerard and Gerard, 1994). C5aR is a G protein-coupled receptor with seven transmembrane helices (Gerard and Gerard, 1991). This receptor is one of the rhodopsin superfamily of GTP-linked binding proteins, but differs from rhodopsin receptors in that the receptor and G protein are linked prior to activation.
G protein-coupled receptors are prevalent throughout the human body, comprising approximately 80% of known cellular receptor types, and mediate signal transduction across the cell membrane for a very wide range of endogenous ligands. They participate in a diverse array of physiological and pathophysiological processes, including, but not limited to those associated with cardiovascular, central and peripheral nervous system, reproductive, metabolic, digestive, immunoinflammatory, and growth disorders, as well as other cell-regulatory and proliferative disorders. Agents, both agonists and antagonists, which selectively modulate functions of G protein-coupled receptors have important therapeutic applications.
C5a is one of the most potent chemotactic agents known, and results neutrophils and macrophages to sites of injury, alters their morphology; induces degranulation; increases calcium mobilisation, vascular permeability (oedema) and neutrophil adhesiveness; contracts smooth muscle; stimulates release of inflammatory mediators (including histamine, TNF-α, IL-1, IL-6, IL-8, prostaglandins, leukotrienes) and lysosomal enzymes; promotes formation of oxygen radicals; and enhances antibody production (Gerard and Gerard, 1994). Overexpression or underregulation of C5a is implicated in the pathogenesis of immunoinflammatory conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis, adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), systemic lupus erythematosus, tissue graft rejection, ischaemic heart disease, reperfusion injury, septic shock, psoriasis, gingivitis, atherosclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, lung injury and extracorporeal post-dialysis syndrome, and in a variety of other conditions, as summarised in Table 1.
TABLE 1
The Role of C5a in Disease
C5a
C5aR
Condition/disease
levels
expression
Details
allergy
++
allergen challenge leads to nasal
symptoms and increased C5a levels
Alzheimer's
++
++
up-regulation of the receptor in
disease
reactive astrocytes, microglia and
endothelial cells in the CNS,
complement system activated by
β-amyloid
ARDS/respiratory
++
distress
Behcet's disease
++
levels highest just prior to ocular
attacks
bronchial asthma
++
capillary leak
++
syndrome
chronic lung
++
Increased C5a levels in pulmonary
disease
effluent fluid from mechanically
ventilated infants with chronic lung
disease
Churg-Strauss
hypersensitivity of granulocytes to
C5a
cystic fibrosis
generation of C5a/effects on PMNs
decompression
++
increased C5a levels during
stress
saturation diving
diabetes type I
++
C5a generated during onset;
circulating monocytes in newly
diagnosed type I diabetes patients
are activated
Familial
Lack of C5a inactivator
Mediterranean
fever
Guillain-Barre
++
CSF levels elevated
ischaemic disease
migration of monocytes into
states/myocardial
myocardium after reperfusion.
infarct
Damage prevented with sCR1
Kimura's disease
humoral factor up-regulates the
response of PMNs to C5a
Multiple
++
increased expression of the
Sclerosis
receptor on foamy macrophages in
acute and chronic MS and fibrous
astrocytes in chronic MS
Meningitis
C5a induces experimental
meningitis; PMN accumulation
seen in the CSF
pancreatitis
++
post-dialysis
++
−
C5a generated via complement
syndrome
activation by tubing material,
C5aR levels decreased on PMNs &
monocytes in chronic state
preeclampsin/
++
C5a levels in elevated at delivery
HELLP
psoriasis
++
C5a levels high in scales
reperfusion injury
++
inhibited by C5 antibody
retinitis
++
C5a detected in vitreous humor
Rheumatoid
++
elevated concentration of C5a
arthritis
found in synovial fluid (5-fold)
and plasma (3-fold)
Severe congenital
−
neutropenia
transplant/graft
++
monoclonal antibodies block the
rejection
damage seen with xenogenic
transplant; increased levels of C5a
seen in the plasma and urine of
patients with renal graft rejection
New agents which limit the pro-inflammatory actions of C5a have potential for inhibiting chronic inflammation, and its accompanying pain and tissue damage. For these reasons, molecules which prevent C5a binding to its receptors are useful for treating chronic inflammatory disorders driven by complement activation. Importantly, such compounds provide valuable new insights to mechanisms of complement-mediated immunity.
In another context, agonists of C5a receptors or other G protein-coupled receptors may also be found to have therapeutic properties in conditions either where the G protein-coupled receptor can be used as a recognition site for drug delivery, or where triggering of such receptors can be used to stimulate some aspect of the human immune system, for example in the treatment of cancers, viral or parasitic infections.
One approach to the development of agonists or antagonists of C5a is through receptor-based design, using knowledge of the three-dimensional structures of C5a, its receptor C5aR, and the interactions between them. The structure of the receptor is unknown. The solution structure of human C5a, a 74 amino acid peptide that is highly cationic and N-glycosylated with a 3 KDa carbohydrate at Asn64, has been determined and is essentially a 4-helix bundle. The C-terminal end (residues 65-74, C5a65-74) was found to be unstructured (Zuiderweg et al, 1989) and this conformational flexibility in the C-terminus has made structure-function studies extremely difficult to interpret.
C5a has a highly ordered N-terminal core domain (residues 1-64; C5a1-64), consisting of a compact antiparallel 4-helix bundle (residues 4-12, 18-26, 32-39, 46-63) connected by loops (13-17, 27-31, 40-45), and further stabilised by 3 disulphide bonds (C21-Cys47, Cys22-Cys54, Cys34-Cys55).
Although the structure of the C5a receptor, C5aR, is unknown, the C5a-binding subunit of human monocyte-derived C5aR has been cloned and identified as a G protein-coupled receptor with transmembrane helices (Gerard and Gerard, 1991). Interactions between C5a and C5aR have been the subject of many investigations which, in summary, suggest that C5a binds via a two-site mechanism in which the N-terminal core domain of C5a is involved in receptor-recognition and binding, while the C-terminus is responsible for receptor activation. This mechanism is illustrated schematically in FIG. 1. The C-terminal “effector” region alone possesses all the information necessary for signal transduction, and is thought to bind in the receptor's interhelical region (Siciliano et al, 1994; deMartino et al, 1995).
An N-terminal interhelical positively-charged region of C5a is responsible for receptor recognition and binding, and binds to a negatively-charged extracellular domain of C5aR (site 1), while the C-terminal “effector” region of C5a is thought to bind with the interhelical region of the receptor (site 2), and is responsible for receptor activation leading to signal transduction (Siciliano et al, 1994).
Numerous short peptide derivatives of the C-terminus of C5a have been found to be agonists of C5a (Kawai et al, 1991; Kawai et al, 1992; Kohl et al, 1993; Drapeau et al, 1993; Ember et al, 1992; Sanderson et al, 1994; Sanderson et al, 1995; Finch et al, 1997; Tempero et al, 1997; Konteatis et al, 1994; DeMartino et al, 1995). The structures of some of these agonists are shown in Table 2 below (compounds 1-6). High molecular weight polypeptide inhibitors of the action of C5a at its receptor, such as monoclonal antibodies to the C5a receptor, are also known (Morgan et al, 1992).
A small molecule, N-methylphenylalanine-lysine-proline-D-cyclohexylalanine-tryptophan-D-arginine (7, MeF-K—P-dCha-W—R), is a full antagonist of the C5a receptor, with no agonist activity when tested on isolated cellular membranes (Konteatis et al, 1994) or intact whole cells. This hexapeptide was developed by modifications of the agonist NMe-F—K—P-dCha-L-r, in which the molecule was progressively substituted at leucine residues with substituents of increasing size (Cha, F, Nph and W). This had the effect of reducing agonist activity. Receptor-binding assays, performed on isolated human neutrophil membranes, showed that the antagonist had only 0.04% relative affinity of C5a for the receptor (Konteatis et al, 1994). A key feature of these reports is the definition of the binding of 7 to the C5a receptor. These authors state that the C-terminal arginine is essential for receptor binding and antagonist activity. This is also the case in all the reports of agonist activity by small peptide analogues of the C-terminus of C5a. However, for the antagonist 7, the authors go further and state that
They proposed that the requirement of the carboxylate is probably the result of its specific interaction with an arginine (Arg 206) in the receptor (De Martino et al, 1995). This idea was supported by a great reduction in receptor-affinity for an analogue of 7 in which the D-arginine (NH2—CH(CO2H)—(CH2)3NHC(:NH)NH2) was replaced by agmatine (NH2—CH2—(CH2)3NHC(:NH)NH2). In summary, De Martino et al claim that the D-arginine interacts via its guanidinium side chain with a negatively-charged amino acid side chain in the receptor. A second interaction between the negatively-charged C-terminal carboxylate of 7 and a positively-charged side chain residue in the receptor is also thought to occur.
We have now determined the solution structure of this hexapeptide 7 and several analogues, and have surprisingly found that in fact a terminal carboxylate group is not required for binding to C5aR or for antagonist activity, and that instead an unusual hitherto unrecognised structural feature, a turn conformation, is responsible for C5a antagonist or agonist binding and activity. The hexapeptide and several new structurally related antagonists have been examined for both their receptor-binding affinities and antagonist activity, using intact polymorphonuclear (PMN) cells. Our results show the hitherto unknown specific structural requirement for the binding of C5a antagonists or agonists to the C5a receptor, which we believe to be common to ligands for the G protein-coupled receptor family. Our establishment of this specific structural requirement has enabled us to design and develop improved molecular probes of the complement system and of C5a-based drugs, and to design small molecules that target other G protein-coupled receptors, which are becoming increasingly recognised as important drug targets due to their crucial roles in signal transduction (G protein-coupled Receptors, IBC Biomedical Library Series, 1996).
Thus our results have enabled us to design constrained structural templates which enable hydrophobic groups to be assembled into a hydrophobic array for interaction with a G protein-coupled receptor, for example at Site 2 of the C5a receptor illustrated in FIG. 1. Such templates or scaffolds, which may be cyclic or acyclic, have not heretofore been suggested for modulators of the activity of C5a receptors or other G protein-coupled receptors.
The invention provides cyclic and non-cyclic modulators of the activity of G-protein-coupled receptors.
According to a first aspect, the invention provides a compound which is an antagonist, of a G protein-coupled receptor, which has no agonist activity, and which has a cyclic or constrained acyclic structure adapted to provide a framework of approximate dimensions as follows: ##STR00001##
Preferably the G protein-coupled receptor is a C5a receptor.
Other cyclic or constrained acyclic molecules, which may be peptidic or non-peptide in nature, can similarly be envisaged to support groups such as A, B, C and D for interaction with a C5a receptor or other G protein-coupled receptor.
In one preferred embodiment, the compound has antagonist activity against C5aR, has no C5a agonist activity, and has the general formula:
##STR00004##
where A is H, alkyl, aryl, NH2, NHalkyl, N(alkyl)2, NHaryl or NHacyl; OH, Oalkyl, Oaryl.
E is the side chain of a D- or L-amino acid selected from the group consisting of tryptophan and homotryptophan;
X1 is —(CH2)nNH— or (CH2)n—S—, where n is an integer of from 1 to 4, preferably 2 or 3, —(CH2)2O—, —(CH2)3O—, —(CH2)3—, —(CH2)4—, or —CH2COCHRNH—, where R is the side chain of any common or uncommon amino acid.
For the purposes of this specification, the term “alkyl” is to be taken to mean a straight, branched, or cyclic, substituted or unsubstituted alkyl chain of 1 to 6, preferably 1 to 4 carbons. Most preferably the alkyl group is a methyl group. The term “acyl” is to be taken to mean a substituted or unsubstituted acyl of 1 to 6, preferably 1 to 4 carbon atoms. Most preferably the acyl group is acetyl. The term “aryl” is to be understood to mean a substituted or unsubstituted homocyclic or heterocyclic aryl group, in which the ring preferably has 5 or 6 members.
A “common” amino acid is a L-amino acid selected from the group consisting of glycine, leucine, isoleucine, valine, alanine, phenylalanine, tyrosine, tryptophan, aspartate, asparagine, glutamate, glutamine, cysteine, methionine, arginine, lysine, proline, serine, threonine and histidine.
An “uncommon” amino acid includes, but is not restricted to, D-amino acids, homo-amino acids, N-alkyl amino acids, dehydroamino acids, aromatic amino acids (other than phenylalanine, tyrosine and tryptophan), ortho-, meta- or para-aminobenzoic acid, ornithine, citrulline, norleucine, γ-glutamic acid, aminobutyric acid and α,α-disubstituted amino acids.
For the purposes of this specification it will be clearly understood that the word “comprising” means “including but not limited to”, and that the word “comprises” has a corresponding meaning.
According to a second aspect, of the invention provides a compound which is an agonist of G protein-coupled receptors, and which has structure III ##STR00005##
Preferably the compound is of structure IV, ##STR00006##
According to a third aspect, the invention provides a composition, comprising a compound according to the invention together with a pharmaceutically-acceptable carrier or excipient.
The compositions of the invention may be formulated for oral or parenteral use, but oral formulations are preferred. It is expected that most if not all compounds of the invention will be stable in the presence of digestive enzymes. Such stability can readily be tested by routine methods known to those skilled in the art.
Suitable formulations for administration by any desired route may be prepared by standard methods, for example by reference to well-known textbooks such as Remington; The Science and Practice of Pharmacy, Vol. II, 1995 (19th edition), A. R. Gennaro (ed), Mack Publishing Company, Easton, Pa., or Australian Prescription Products Guide, Vol. 1, 1995 (24th edition) J. Thomas (ed), Australian Pharmaceutical Publishing Company Ltd, Victoria, Australia.
In a fourth aspect, the invention provides a method of treatment of a pathological condition mediated by a G protein-coupled receptor, comprising the step of administering an effective amount of a compound of the invention to a mammal in need of such treatment.
Preferably the condition mediated by a G protein-coupled receptor is a condition mediated by a C5a receptor, and more preferably involves overexpression or underregulation of C5a. Such conditions include but are not limited to rheumatoid arthritis, adult respiratory distress syndrome (ARDS), systemic lupus erythematosus, tissue graft rejection, ischaemic heart disease, reperfusion injury, septic shock, psoriasis, gingivitis, atherosclerosis, Alzheimer's disease, lung injury and extracorporeal post-dialysis syndrome.
While the invention is not in any way restricted to the treatment of any particular animal or species, it is particularly contemplated that the compounds of the invention will be useful in medical treatment of humans, and will also be useful in veterinary treatment, particularly of companion animals such as cats and dogs, livestock such as cattle, horses and sheep, and zoo animals, including large bovids, felids, ungulates and canids.
The compounds may be administered at any suitable dose and by any suitable route. Oral administration is preferred because of its greater convenience and acceptability. The effective dose will depend on the nature of the condition to be treated, and the age, weight, and underlying state of health of the individual treatment. This will be at the discretion of the attending physician or veterinarian. Suitable dosage levels may readily be determined by trail and error experimentation, using methods which are well-known in the art.
A-C show the effect of increasing concentrations (top to bottom) of C5a antagonists inhibiting myeloperoxidase release in human PMNs (n=3 in A-C).
A: 7 at 0, 0.1, 0.3, 1.0 μM (top to bottom)
B: 15 at 0, 0.1, 0.03, 0.1 μM (top to bottom)
C: 17 at 0, 0.01, 0.03, 0.1 μM (top to bottom)
D: Comparative affinities for PMN C5qR receptor.
Inhibition of binding of 125I-C5a to human PMNs by 7 (top), (middle), 17 (bottom). All data are means±SEM.
Abscissa: time after LPS (1 mg/kg i.v. injection).
Ordinate: percent change in haematocrit (A) value or level of circulating polymorphonuclear (PMN) leukocytes (B) compared to time zero.
The invention will now be described by way of reference only to the following general methods and experimental examples, and to the figures. Abbreviations used herein are as follows:
BOP
benzotriazole-1-yl-oxy-tris-(dimethylamino)-phosphonium
hexafluorophosphate
D-Cha
D-cyclohexylamine
DIPEA
diisopropylethylamine
DMF
dimethylformamide
DMSO
dimethylsulphoxide
HBTU
O-benzotriazole N′,N′,N′,N′-tetramethyluronium hexafluoro-
phosphate
LPS
lipopolysaccharide
PMN
polymorphonuclear granulocyte
RMSD
root mean square deviation
RP-HPLC
reverse phase-high performance liquid chromatography
TFA
trifluoroacetic acid;
Throughout the specification conventional single-letter and three-letter codes are used to represent amino acids.
General Methods
Protected amino acids and resins were obtained from Novabiochem. TFA, DIPEA and DMF (peptide synthesis grade) were purchased from Auspep. All other materials were reagent grade unless otherwise stated. Preparative scale reverse-phase HPLC separations were performed on a Vydac C18 reverse-phase column (2.2×25 cm), and analytical reverse-phase HPLC separations were performed on a waters Delta-Pak PrepPak C18 reverse-phase column (0.8×10 cm), using gradient mixtures of solvent A=water/0.1% TFA and solvent B=water 10%/acetonitrile 90%, 0.09% TFA. The molecular weight of the peptides was determined by electrospray mass spectrometry recorded on a triple quadrupole mass spectrometer (PE SCIEX API III), as described elsewhere (Haviland et al, 1995). 1H-NMR spectra were recorded on either a Bruker ARX 500 MHz or a Varian Unity 400 spectrometer. Proton assignments were determined by 2D NMR experiments (DFCOSY, TOCSY, NOESY).
Non-peptidic compounds were synthesized using conventional organic chemical methods. Compounds were analysed by 1H-NMR spectroscopy and by mass spectrometry.
Peptide Synthesis
Some representative peptide syntheses are now given. Linear peptide sequences were assembled by manual stepwise solid-phase peptide synthesis with HBTU activation and DIEA in situ neutralisation. Boc chemistry was employed for temporary Nα-protection of amino acids with two 1 min treatments with TFA for Boc group removal. The peptides were fully deprotected and cleaved by treatment with liquid HF (10 ml; p-cresol (1 ml); −5° C.; 1-2 hr). Analytical HPLC (gradient; 0% B to 50% B over 40 min); 7, Rt=32.0 min, [M+H]+(calc.)=900.5, [M+H]+(exper.)=900.7; 8, Rt=32.2 min, [M+H]+(calc.)=899.6, [M+H]+(exper.)=899.7; 9, Rt=30.0 min, [M+H)+(calc.)=900.5, [M+H]+(exper.)=900.7; 10, Rt=23.8 min, [M+H]+(calc.)=860.5, [M+H]+(exper.) 860.5.
Structures for the peptides are shown in Table 4 below.
a) Synthesis of Cycle 11
This is a general method used for the synthesis of a wide range of cyclic antagonists covered by this patent. For example, in the case of cycle 11, its linear precursor peptide was synthesised by Fmoc chemistry using HBTU/DIEA activation on an Fmoc-D-Arg(Mtr)-Want resin. Fmoc group removal was effected using two 1 min treatments with 50% piperidine/DMF. Cleavage and deprotection using 95% TFA/2.5% TIPS/2.5% H2O gave the Mtr-protected peptide, which was purified by RP-HPLC. Cyclization of the protected, purified peptide using 3eq BOP and 10eq DIEA at a 1 mM concentration in DMF stirring for 15 hr gave the cyclised product, which was fully deprotected using 1M TMSBr in TFA. A final RP-HPLC purification gave the desired peptide in yields of 50% for the cyclisation. Rt=37.7 min, [M+H]+(calc.) 910.5, [M+H]+(exper.)=910.7.
b) Synthesis of Cycle 12
Cyclization of the cleaved and fully deprotected peptide was achieved by stirring a 1 mM solution in DMF with 3eq BOP and 10 eq pyridine as base for 15 hr. A final RP-HPLC purification gave the desired peptide in yields of 22% for the cyclization. Rt=37.3 min, (M+H]+(calc.)=896.5, [M+H]+(exper.)=896.5.
NMR Structure Determination
1H-NMR spectra were recorded for compound 7 (3 mg in 750 μl d6-DMSO, δ2.50) referenced to solvent on a Varian Unity 400 spectrometer at 24° C. Two dimensional 1H-NMR NOESY (relaxation delay 2.0 s, mix time 50-300 ms), DFQ-COSY and TOCSY (mixing time 75 ms) experiments were acquired and recorded in phase sensitive mode. Acquisition times=0.186 s, spectral width=5500 Hz, number of complex points (t1 dimension)=1024 for all experiments. Data was zero-filled and Fourier transformed to 1024 real points in both dimensions.
NMR data was processed using TRIAD software (Tripos Assoc.) on a Silicon Graphics Indy work station. 2D NOE cross peaks were integrated and characterised into strong (1.8-2.5 Å), medium (2.3-3.5 Å) and weak (3.3-5.0 Å). Preliminary three-dimensional structures were calculated from upper and lower distance limit files using Diana 2.8 (69 distance constraints, including 27 for adjacent residues and 6 further away) with the redundant dihedral angle constraints (REDAC) strategy. Upper and lower distance constraints were accurately calculated using MARDIGRAS. At this stage the peptide was examined for possible hydrogen bonds, and these were added as distance constraints. The 50 lowest energy Diana structures were subjected to restrained molecular dynamics (RMD) and energy minimisation (REM). Initially, REM consisted of a 50 step steepest descent followed by 100 step conjugate gradient minimisation. RMD was performed by simulated heating of the structures to 300K for 1 ps, followed by 500K for 1 ps. The temperature was gradually lowered to 300K over 2 ps and finally for 2 ps at 200K. REM was performed again with a 50 step steepest descent, 200 step conjugate gradient followed by a 300 step Powell minimisation. The final structures were examined to obtain a mean pairwise rms difference over the backbone heavy atoms (N, Cα and C). Twenty of the 50 structures had a mean rmsd<0.5 Å for all backbone atoms (O, N, C).
Molecular Modelling
A model of cycle 12, shown in
Receptor-Binding Assay
Assays were performed with fresh human PMNs, isolated as previously described (Sanderson et al, 1995), using a buffer of 50 mm HEPES, 1 mM CaCl2, 5 mM MgCl2, 0.5% bovine serum albumin, 0.1% bacitracin and 100 μM phenylmethylsulfonyl fluoride (PMSF). In assays performed at 4° C., buffer, unlabelled human recombinant C5a (Sigma) or peptide, Hunter/Bolton labelled 125, —C5a (˜20 pM) (New England Nuclear, MA) and PMNs (0.2×106) were added sequentially to a Millipore Multiscreen assay plate (HV 0.45) having a final volume of 200 μL/well. After incubation for 60 min at 4° C., the samples were filtered and the plate washed once with buffer. Filters were dried, punched and counted in an LKB gamma counter. Non-specific binding was assessed by the inclusion of 1 mM peptide or 100 nM C5a which typically resulted in 10-15% total binding.
Data was analysed using non-linear regression and statistics with Dunnett post test.
Myeloperoxidase Release
Cells were isolated as previously described (Sanderson et al, 1995) and incubated with cytochalasin B (5 μg/mL, 15 min, 37° C.). Hank's Balanced Salt solution containing 0.15% gelatin and peptide was added on to a 96 well plate (total volume 100 μL/well), followed by 25 μL cells (4×106/mL). To assess the capacity of each peptide to antagonise C5a, cells were incubated for 5 min at 37° C. with each peptide, followed by addition of C5a (100 nM) and further incubation for 5 min. Then 50 μL of sodium phosphate (0.1M, pH 6.8) was added to each well, the plate was cooled to room temperature, and 25 μL of a fresh mixture of equal volumes of dimethoxybenzidine (5.7 mg/mL) and H2O2 (0.51%) was added to each well. The reaction was stopped at 10 min by addition of 2% sodium azide. Absorbances were measured at 450 nm in a Bioscan 450 plate reader, corrected for control values (no peptide), and analysed by non-linear regression.
In Vivo Assays of Anti-Inflammatory Activity
The following well-known in vivo assay systems may be used to assess the anti-inflammatory activity of compounds of the invention. All assay data are analysed using non-linear regression analysis and Student's t-test, analysis of variance, with p<0.05 as the threshold level of significance.
(a) Carrageenan Paw Oedema
Anaesthetised (i.p. ketamine & xylazine) Wistar rats (150-200 g) or mice were injected with sterilised air (20 ml day 1, 10 ml day 4) into the subcutaneous tissue of the back. The cavity can be used after 6 days, whereupon carrageenan (2 ml, 1% w/w in 0.9% saline) was injected into the air pouch and exudate was collected after 10 hr. Test compounds are administered daily after Day 6 and their anti-inflammatory effects assayed by differential counting of cells in the air-pouch exudate. Animals were killed at appropriate times after injection and 2 ml 0.9% saline was used to lavage the cavity, lavage fluids were transferred to heparinised tube and cells were counted with a haemocytometer and Diff-Quik strained cytocentrifuged preparation.
Alternatively, a routine carrageenan paw oedema was developed in Wistar rats by administering a pedal injection of carrageenan to elicit oedema which is visible in 2 h and maximised in 4 h. Test compounds are given 40 min before inflammagen and evaluated by microcaliper measurements of paws after 2 & 4 hr. See Fairlie, D. P. et al (1987). Also see Walker and Whitehouse (1978).
(b) Adjuvant Arthritis.
Adjuvant arthritis was induced in rats (3 strains) either microbially (injection of heat-killed Mycobacterium tuberculosis) or chemically (with pyridine) by inoculation with the arthritogenic adjuvant co-administered with oily vehicles (Freund's adjuvants) in the tail base. (See Whitehouse, M. W., Handbook of Animal Models for the Rheumatic Diseases, Eds. Greenwald, R. A.; Diamond, H. S.; Vol. 1, pp. 3-16, CRC Press).
Within 13 days the adjuvant arthritis is manifested by local inflammation and ulceration in the tail, gross swelling of all four paws, inflammatory lesions in paws and ears, weight loss and fever. These symptoms, which are similar to those of inflammatory disease in humans (Winter and Nuss, 1966), can be alleviated by agents such as indomethacin or cyclosporin which also show beneficial effects in man (eg. Ward and Cloud, 1966). Without drug treatment at Day 14, arthritic rats had hypertrophy of the paws, reduced albumin but raised acute phase reaction proteins in serum, and depressed hepatic metabolism of xenobiotics as indicated by prolonged barbiturate-induced sleeping times.
To assess activity, compounds were administered for 4 days orally (<10 mg/kg/day) or i.p. from Days 10-13 following inoculation with arthritogen (Day 0). The inflammation was either not visible or very significantly reduced in rear or front paws as assessed by microcaliper measurements of paw thickness and tail volume, as well as by gross inspection of inflammatory lesions. Animals are sacrificed by cervical dislocation on Day 18 unless arthritis signs are absent, whereupon duration of observations is continued with special permission from the Ethics committees. Experiments are staggered to maximise throughput and allow early comparisons between compounds. This routine assay is well-accepted as identifying anti-inflammatory agents for use in humans.
We have focused on the C-terminal residues of C5a, in order to explore structure-activity relationships in the search for peptide sequences with potent agonist activity. Many of these peptides are full agonists relative to C5a, but have markedly lower potency (Sanderson et al, 1994, 1995; Finch et al, 1997). Our initial structure-activity investigations have been particularly informative. Mutating the decapeptide C-terminus of C5a (SEQ ID NO: 1, C5a65-74, ISHKDMQLGR) twice with I65Y and H67F (eg. 2) led to enhancement of agonist potency by about 2 orders of magnitude. These results are summarised in Table 2. Analyses of Ramschandran plots and 2D NMR spectra for compound 2 suggested that certain structural features, namely a twisted “helix-like” backbone conformation for residues 65-69 and a β-turn for residues 71-74, might be responsible for activity. These preliminary results provided some insight to structural requirements for tight binding to a C5a receptor.
TABLE 2
Pharmacological Activity of C5a Agonist Analogues*
PMN
Fetal
Enzyme
Binding
Peptide
Artery
Release
Affinity
No.
Peptide
EC50 (μM)
EC50 (μM)
IC50 (μM)
SEQ.
C5a65-74
>1000
>1000
>1000
ID NO: 1
(ISHKDMQLGR)
SEQ.
YSFKDMQLGR
9.6
92
1.3
ID NO: 2
SEQ.
YSFKDMPLaR
0.5
72
3.7
ID NO: 3
SEQ.
YSFKPMPLaR
0.2
4.3
6.0
ID NO: 4
SEQ.
C5a37-46-
0.06
5.9
0.7
ID NO: 5
ahxYSFKPMPLaR
SEQ.
C5a12-20-
0.08
0.7
0.07
ID NO: 6
ahxYSFKPMPLaR
C5a
0.02
0.03
0.0005
*Finch et al, 1997
Compounds 4, 5 and 6 in Table 2 are the highest affinity small C5a agonists so far known, with up to 25% C5a potency in human fetal artery, 5% C5potency in human PMN enzyme release assays and 1% C5a affinity for PMN C5aR (Finch et al., 1997). For the PMN receptor, these compounds have up to 100-fold higher apparent affinity than any small molecule previously described in the literature.
The “high” affinities (70 nM-6 μM) of these agonist analogues for C5aR in intact PMN cells have enabled us to identify a common topographical feature in peptide agonists that correlates with expression of spasmogenic activities and enzyme-release assays in human PMNs. This preferred backbone conformation is a type II β-turn.
The small size of these agonist peptides makes them amenable to synthetic modification to optimise their affinities, activities, and bioavailabilities, and hence useful as mechanistic probes of receptor activation.
We used two dimensional nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy to determine the three dimensional structure of 7 and found that while there is no discernible structure in water, there is evidence of a stable gamma-turn structure in dimethylsulfoxide.
The 1D 1H-NMR spectrum of peptide 7 in d6-DMSO at 24° C. shows 4 distinct resonances for amide-NH protons, as summarized in Table 3. To establish their possible involvement in intramolecular hydrogen bonds, a deuterium exchange experiment was performed by adding a 10-fold excess of D2O to the solution. Two of the amide-NH doublets disappeared immediately, along with resonances attributable to the N-terminal methylamine protons. However, the other two amide NH resonances, as well as a broad resonance at approximately 8.05 ppm, persisted for up to 6.5 hours (FIG. 2). These three slowly-exchanging protons are assigned to the amide NHs of Trp and d-Cha and the side chain amine of Lys, the slow exchange behaviour being characteristic of hydrogen-bonding. The amine assignment was established from the TOCSY spectrum where cross peaks were observed between the protonated amine and the ε, δ and γ CH2 protons. A temperature dependence study (20-60° C.) of the amide-NH chemical shifts (Δδ/T=2.5 ppb/deg, dCha-NH; 6 ppb/deg, Trp-NH; 6.5 ppb, Lys-NH; 8.7 ppb, Arg-NH) unambiguously confirmed the involvement of the dCha-NH only in intramolecular hydrogen bonding.
TABLE 3
1H-NMR Assignmentsa for 7 in d6-DMSO
Residue
bHN
Hα
Hβ
Hγ
Others
MePhe
—
4.06
3.09,
—
c7.17, 7.29; d2.46; f8.98
3.06
Lys
8.83
4.54
1.74,
1.32
e1.51; f2.74, g7.76 (NH2)
1.55
Pro
—
4.30
2.084,
1.88,
e3.61, f3.48
1.74
1.78
d-Cha
7.91
4.35
1.19,
0.76
e1.43, 1.08; f1.61, 1.58;
1.06
0.73
Trp
8.01
4.65
3.11,
—
c6.97, 7.06, 7.13, 7.32,
2.94
7.65; g10.80
d-Arg
8.44
4.20
1.73,
1.42
e3.08; g7.60
1.58
aReferenced to residual d6-DMSO at 2.50 ppm.
bAmide NHS, 3′NH-CaH values (Hz): 7.91 (Lys), 7.77 (d-Arg), 8.34 (Trp), 8.53 (d-Cha).
cAromatics
dN-Me.
eHδ.
fHε
gNH/NH2 amine.
A series of 2D 1H-NMR spectra were measured for 7 at 24° C. in d6-DMSO to determine the three-dimensional structure. TOCSY and DFQ-COSY experiments were used to identify residue types, while sequential assignments were made from analysis of NOESY data. From a series of 100 structures generated from NOESY data, fifty of the lowest energy structures were subjected to restrained molecular dynamics (200K-500K) and energy minimised. A set of 20 calculated structures with a root mean square deviation (rmsd)<0.5 Å (backbone atoms) are superimposed in
In combination, the NMR constraint data, 3NH-CαH values, deuterium exchange and temperature dependence data establish an unusual turn structure for hexapeptide 7 which is constrained by up to three hydrogen bond, as shown in FIG. 4. The evidence is very strong for one intramolecular hydrogen bond from dCha-NH . . . OC-Lys (2.72 Å, N—H . . . O angle 157°, C═O . . . H angle 84°), forming a 7-membered ring that defines an inverse γ-turn. The dChaNH—O-TrpNH angle is 56.4°. The deuterium exchange data and NMR constraint data together point to a second intramolecular hydrogen bond Trp-NH . . . OC-Lys (3.31 Å, N—H . . . O angle 159°, CO . . . H angle 137.3°) forming a 10-membered ring characteristic of a β-turn. The φ and ψ angles (100 2=−58.4°, ψ2=62.0°; φ=96.6°, ψ3=16.6°) most closely match a type II β-turn (Bandekar, 1993; Hutchinson and Thornton, 1994) which is distorted by the presence of the γ-turn wholly within the β-turn.
To our knowledge this is the first example of an intramolecular hydrogen bond between residues within a β-turn, although there are many examples of hydrogen bonds between a residue within the “10 membered ring” of a β-turn and a residue outside of it (Bandekar, 1993). A third hydrogen bond (2.76 Å, N—H . . . O angle 160.3°), between the side-chain amine of Lys and the C-terminal carboxylate, is suggested by the NMR constraint data, by slow NH/ND exchange and by detection of a weak NOE between Lys-NH . . . Trp-αCH2. This may further constrain the molecule into the observed turn conformation. Such ion-pairing is common in dipolar aprotic solvents such as dimethylsulphoxide and may also be relevant in a hydrophobic protein environment.
NMR solution structures have also been determined for several of the cyclic antagonists described in the following examples, and show that in each case the type II β-turn is preserved and stabilized by the cyclic structure.
The constraining β and γ turns proposed in the linear peptide 7 have parallels in cyclic peptides. We have previously detected overlapping β and γ turns in a cyclic octapeptide from ascidiacyclamide (Abbenante et al, 1996). Combinations of a β- and γ-turn have also been found in the backbones of cyclic penta- and hexapeptides, particularly those containing alternating D- and L-amino acids (Marraud and Aubry 1996; Fairlie et al, 1995; Kessler et al, 1995; Stradley et al, 1990). For example a type II β-turn and an inverse γ-turn have been identified in cyclic antagonists c-(D-Glu-Ala-D-allo-Ile-Leu-D-Trp] (Ihara et al, 1991; Coles et al, 1993; Ihara et al, 1992; Bean et al, 1994) and c-(D-Asp-Pro-D-Val-Leu-D-Trp) (Bean et al, 1994) for endothelin receptors, and in members of the rhodopsin family of G protein-coupled receptors with seven transmembrane domains (X. -M. Cheng et al, 1994). In the latter case, as in 7, an inverse γ-turn forms between residues (Asp-CO . . . Val-NH, Lys-CO . . . dCha-NH) that flank the proline.
We also examined the receptor-binding and antagonist activity of the hexapeptide 7 for comparison with our compounds. The previous-report by Konteatis et al (1994) concerned the ability of 7 to compete with C5a binding to receptors on isolated PMN membranes (IC50 70 nM), which is not necessarily physiologically relevant. We examined competition between 7 and C5a using intact PMN cells, and found that, under these conditions, 7 binds with much lower receptor affinity of IC50 1.8 μM. We confirmed that 7 is a full antagonist with no agonist properties. These results are summarized in FIG. 5a and Table 4. The relative affinity (ratio) of 7 for the C5aR in intact PMNs in our assays was similar to that previously reported for isolated PMN membranes.
We have also found that 7 shows antagonist activity against both C5a (
A new discovery from the data in Table 4 is the linear correlation between the log of binding affinities and the log of antagonist potencies for these Site 2 antagonists (compounds 7-12, Table 4). The importance of this linear relationship is that since receptor affinity and antagonist activity are directly proportional, the experimentally simpler approach of measuring receptor binding may be used to estimate the antagonist activity for such small compounds, provided that there is no evidence of agonist activity.
TABLE 4
Receptor-Binding Affinitiesa and Antagonist Activitiesb in Human PMNs
Receptor Affinitya
Antagonist Potencyb
Agonist
Compound
IC50 (μM)
IC50 (μM)
Activityc
SEQ. ID NO: 7
MeFKP (dCha) Wr
1.8
(15)
0.085
(9)
No
SEQ. ID NO: 8
MeFKP (dCha) Wr-CONH2
14
(5)
0.5
(3)
No
SEQ. ID NO: 9
MeFKP (dCha) WR
11
(5)
0.7
(3)
No
SEQ. ID NO: 10
MeFKPLWR
144
(1)
>1000
(3)
nd
SEQ. ID NO: 11
Ac-F-[KP (dCha) Wr
3.2
(40)
0.090
(5)
No
SEQ. ID NO: 12
Ac-F-[OP (dCha) Wr
0.28
(6)
0.012
(4)
No
SEQ. ID NO: 4
YSFKPMPLaR
6.0d
—
Yes
SEQ. ID NO: 1
C5a65-74, ISHKDMQLGR
>1000e
—
—
C5a
0.0008
(9)
—
Yes
Number of experiments in parenthesis. Corrected for amino acid content
Square brackets indicate cyclic portion.
nd = not determined
a50% reduction in binding of 125I-C5a to intact human PMNs
b50% reduction in myeloperoxidase secretion from human PMNs mediated by 100 nM C5a
cAgonist activity in dose range 0.1 nM-1 nM
dFinch et al, 1997;
eKawai et al, 1991
It has previously been proposed that the C-terminus of C5a and of agonist peptides is essential for activity, due to its interaction with a positively-charged Arg206 of the receptor (DeMartino et al, 1995). We confirm here that the C-terminal carboxylate is indeed important for activity (8 vs. 7), but wondered whether the origin of this effect might be due to hydrogen bonding between the carboxylate anion and the positively charged amine side chain of Lys. Conversion to the amide (8) certainly reduces both receptor-affinity and antagonist activity approximately 5-fold. Changing chirality of the Arg-Cα (9 vs. 7) causes a similar reduction in activity, and replacing dCha with the less bulky Leu residue (10) is also detrimental to receptor binding. However, potency is recovered for cyclic compounds 11 and 12, in which an amide bond is tolerated at the C-terminus, consistent with the structural interpretation above that the advantage of the carboxylate in 7 may be associated with intramolecular hydrogen bonding. The replacement of this hydrogen bond it 7 with a covalent amide bond in 11 and 12 more effectively stabilizes the turn conformation.
TABLE 5
Receptor Binding and Antagonist Activity
of Cyclic Molecules
##STR00007##
Receptor
Affinity
Agonist
Compound
n
R
Isomer*
μM
Activity
SEQ. ID NO: 13
1
H
S-
9
No
SEQ. ID NO: 14
R-
34
No
SEQ. ID NO: 15
2
H
S-
0.3
No
SEQ. ID NO: 16
R-
3.7
No
SEQ. ID NO: 17
3
Ac
S-
0.3
No
SEQ. ID NO: 11
Ac
R-
38
No
SEQ. ID NO: 18
4
Ac
S-
3.2
No
SEQ. ID NO: 12
Ac
R-
51
No
Refers to stereochemistry of Arg side chain
Some examples of these cyclic antagonists and their apparent receptor-binding affinities and antagonist potencies are given in Tables 4, 5 and 6 as well as in
TABLE 6
PEPTIDE
pD2 ± SEa
IC50 (M)a
(n)
pD2 ± SEb
IC50 (M)b
(n)
Effect of Cyclisation on Antagonist Binding Affinity and Antagonist Potency
SEQ. ID NO: 11
AcF-[KPdChaWr]
5.49 ± 0.22
3.2
4
7.07 ± 0.29
0.09
5
SEQ. ID NO: 12
AcF-[OPdChaWr]
6.44 ± 0.14*
0.4
9
7.30 ± 0.09
0.05
9
SEQ. ID NO: 19
[FWPdChaWr]
4.37 ± 0.36*
43
3
nd
SEQ. ID NO: 20
AcF-[KMdChaWr]
4.81 ± 0.06
15
2
nd
SEQ. ID NO: 21
AcF-[KKdChaWr]
3.94 ± 0.4
116
3
4.88
13
1
Effect of length of linker in cycle on antagonist binding affinity and antagonist potency
SEQ. ID NO: 22
AcF-[XPdChaWr]
5.02 ± 0.07
9.5
3
4.71 ± 0.23
20
3
SEQ. ID NO: 23
AcF-[X2PdChaWr]
4.77 ± 0.14*
17
3
6.09 ± 0.08*
0.8
3
SEQ. ID NO: 12
AcF-[OPdChaWr]
4.60 ± 0.06*
16
4
6.42 ± 0.10
0.4
4
SEQ. ID NO: 24
AcKF-[OPdChaWr]
4.96 ± 0.03
11
3
6.73
0.2
1
SEQ. ID NO: 14
F-[XPdChaWr]
4.39 ± 0.10*
41
3
nd
SEQ. ID NO: 16
F-[X2PdChaWr]
5.42 ± 0.05
3.8
3
6.70 ± 0.04
0.4
3
SEQ. ID NO: 25
F-[OPdChaWr]
5.51 ± 0.07
3.1
3
5.79 ± 0.34*
1.6
3
SEQ. ID NO: 26
F-[KPdChaWr]
5.09 ± 0.08
8.1
3
5.55 ± 0.57*
2.8
3
Effect of L-Arg on antagonist binding affinity and antagonist potency
SEQ. ID NO: 17
AcF-[OPdChaWr]
6.57 ± 0.05
0.3
3
7.91 ± 0.17*
0.01
3
SEQ. ID NO: 13
F-[XPdChaWr]
4.98 ± 0.05
10
3
5.63 ± 0.13*
2.4
3
SEQ. ID NO: 15
F-[X2PdChaWr]
6.50 ± 0.04*
0.3
5
7.36 ± 0.13
0.04
3
SEQ. ID NO: 27
F-[OPdChaWr]
7.21 ± 0.01*
0.06
3
7.41 ± 0.14
0.04
3
SEQ. ID NO: 28
F-[KPdChaWr]
6.50 ± 0.12*
0.3
4
6.69 ± 0.04
0.2
3
These results demonstrate:
Tables 5 and 6 list the C5a receptor affinities of some examples of cyclic antagonists of C5a, and their ability to bind to, and inhibit, binding of C5a to human PMNs is illustrated in FIG. 6. Surprisingly these data show that the L-arginine is preferred over the D-arginine, in contrast to the linear compound 7 in which the D-arginine confers higher affinity for the receptor than does L-arginine. The data also show that the size of the macrocycle is optimal when n=2 or 3, the smaller cycle where n=1 and the larger cycle when n=4 being clearly less active. This requirement for a tightly constrained cycle is probably due to the need to correctly position the attached side chain residues of, for example, Trp, dCha, Arg and Phe for interaction with the receptor.
There is a correlation between binding affinities and antagonist potency for the site 2 antagonists (compounds 7-12, Table 2). It thus appears that antagonist potency is dependent upon changes that occur at site 2 alone. Without wishing to be bound by any proposed mechanism, we believe that this may be because the mechanism of antagonism is related to conformational change to a turn conformation induced by 7 at site 2 of the receptor.
Currently there is no information about different types of C5aRs. We have previously shown marked differences in the responsiveness of different cells containing functional C5aRs to agonists (Sanderson et al, 1994, 1995; Finch et al, 1997) and we can now provide more information by examining potency and efficacy of selective agonists and antagonists relative to human recombinant C5a. For agonists, the tissue or cell selectivity may reveal functionally different receptors. Binding assays using human PMNs, U937 cells, or circulating monocytes are used to determine affinities for C5aRs. Selectivity for different C5aRs is ascertained by differential antagonism. This combined approach allows pharmacological characterisation of new agonists or antagonists, and may lead to a potential functional classification of C5aRson different cells.
Compounds were evaluated in an acute model of C5a-induced neutropenia. Transient neutropenia maximises 5 min after i.v. C5a and is profound, with >90% of circulating neutrophils disappearing from circulation at effective doses of C5a, as shown in FIG. 8. The neutropenia is due to transient adherence of circulating neutrophils to the vascular endothelium. Preliminary data show that neutropenia caused by i.v. C5a is blocked by a C5a antagonist. For example, F-[OPdChaWR], (1 mg/kg), given prior to 2 μg C5a i.v., inhibits C5a-induced neutropenia in vivo (
LPS causes rapid neutropenia in rats. If this effect of LPS is blocked by C5a antagonists, then C5a may be of major importance in the acute effects of LPS, and the results shown in
The results also indicate that the C5a antagonist inhibits the increase in haematocrit caused by LPS, showing that vascular leakage of serum caused by LPS is also inhibited.
These results demonstrate that C5a receptor antagonists, such as those described in this invention, may have therapeutic utility in septicaemic individuals. The ability to inhibit the adherence of PMNs to vascular endothelium, and to inhibit the vascular leakage to LPS as shown by the reduction of haematocrit values, indicates powerful anti-inflammatory effects of these compounds against proinflammatory stimuli activating the complement system, such as endotoxin or LPS.
Preliminary experiments in rats have revealed that the cyclic antagonists summarized in Table 5 are active at less than 20 mg/kg as anti-inflammatory agents in suppressing the onset of either carrageenan-induced paw oedema or adjuvant-induced polyarthritis. The maximally effective dosages for even moderately-effective antagonists are 10 mg/kg or less, given i.p. or p.o. Many anti-inflammatory drugs currently used in humans were initially evaluated in such assays, and also showed activity in these rat models of inflammation. These preliminary indications of efficacy in vivo indicate that C5a antagonists have therapeutic potential in human inflammatory conditions.
Using the rat carrageenan paw oedema assay, we found that a compound, AcF-[O—P-dCha-W-r], which is 100 times less active than 17 in vitro as a C5a antagonist in PMNs, has some in vivo activity in rats given 1 mg/kg of the compound I.P, 30 min prior to the carageenan injection. Paw swelling was measured for up to 4.5 hr. The results, shown in
In recent years there have been many attempts to mimic β- and γ-turn peptides that represent bioactive protein surfaces, resulting in notable mimetics for RGD (arginine-glycine-aspartate) peptides, somatostatin and opioid peptides, to name a few derived through structure-activity relationships (see for example Marraud and Aubry, 1996; Fairlie et al, 1995). Most of these examples preserve a turn structure through cyclisation of the peptide. On the other hand, there are comparatively few short acyclic peptides that have been found to have substantial turn structure in solution (Dyson et al, 1988; Rizo and Gierasch, 1992; Pràcheur et al, 1994). It is usually argued that short acyclic peptides adopt a myriad of solution structures that may include small populations of turn structures that are responsible for bioactivity.
This invention describes a series of conformationally-constrained turn-containing molecules that are preorganized for binding to the same G protein-coupled receptor(s) of human cells that are targeted by human C5a. The invention is applicable to other C protein-coupled receptors.
The principal feature of the compounds of the invention is the preorganized arrangement, which brings at least three hydrophobic groups and a charged group into neighbouring space, creating a hydrophobic surface ‘patch’. These results enable the design and development of even more potent conformationally-constrained, small molecule antagonists of C5a.
In the light of the aforementioned prior art, it was surprising to find that a C-terminal carboxylate was not necessary in our compounds in order to obtain good receptor-binding or antagonist activity. The cyclic antagonists have an amide bond at the ‘C-terminal’ arginine position. The replacement of the carboxylate in 7 with a covalent amide bond effectively stabilises the required turn conformation.
Cyclic and non-peptidic antagonists have several important advantages over peptides as drugs. The cycles described in this invention are stable to proteolytic degradation for at least several hours at 37° C. in human blood or plasma, or in human or rat gastric juices or in the presence of digestive enzymes such as pepsin, trypsin and chymotrypsin. In contrast, short peptides composed of L-amino acids are rapidly degraded to their component amino acids within a few minutes under these conditions. A second advantage lies in the constrained single conformations adopted by the cyclic and non-peptidic molecules, whereas acyclic or linear peptides are flexible enough to adopt several structures in solution other than the required receptor-binding structure. Thirdly, cyclic and non-peptidic compounds such as those described in this invention are usually more lipid-soluble and more pharmacologically bioavailable as drugs than peptides, which can rarely be administered orally. Fourthly, the plasma half-lives of cyclic and non-peptidic molecules are usually longer than those of peptides.
It will be apparent to the person skilled in the art that while the invention has been described in some detail for the purposes of clarity and understanding, various modifications and alterations to the embodiments and methods described herein may be made without departing from the scope of the inventive concept disclosed in this specification.
References cited herein are listed on the following pages, and are incorporated herein by this reference.
Fairlie, David, Taylor, Stephen Maxwell, Finch, Angela Monique, Wong, Allan
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