1. Academic Validation
  2. Design and synthesis of aryl diphenolic azoles as potent and selective estrogen receptor-beta ligands

Design and synthesis of aryl diphenolic azoles as potent and selective estrogen receptor-beta ligands

  • J Med Chem. 2004 Oct 7;47(21):5021-40. doi: 10.1021/jm049719y.
Michael S Malamas 1 Eric S Manas Robert E McDevitt Iwan Gunawan Zhang B Xu Michael D Collini Chris P Miller Tam Dinh Ruth A Henderson James C Keith Jr Heather A Harris
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Chemical and Screening Sciences, Wyeth Research, CN 8000, Princeton, NJ 08543-8000, USA. [email protected]
Abstract

New diphenolic azoles as highly selective estrogen receptor-beta agonists are reported. The more potent and selective analogues of these series have comparable binding affinities for ERbeta as the natural ligand 17beta-estradiol but are >100-fold selective over ERalpha. Our design strategy not only followed a traditional SAR approach but also was supported by X-ray structures of ERbeta cocrystallized with various ligands as well as molecular modeling studies. These strategies enabled us to take advantage of a single conservative residue substitution in the ligand-binding pocket, ERalpha Met(421) --> ERbeta Ile(373), to optimize ERbeta selectivity. The 7-position-substituted benzoxazoles (Table 5) were the most selective ligands of both azole series, with ERB-041 (117) being >200-fold selective for ERbeta. The majority of ERbeta selective agonists tested that were at least approximately 50-fold selective displayed a consistent in vivo profile: they were inactive in several models of classic estrogen action (uterotrophic, osteopenia, and vasomotor instability models) and yet were active in the HLA-B27 transgenic rat model of inflammatory bowel disease. These data suggest that ERbeta-selective agonists are devoid of classic estrogenic effects and may offer a novel therapy to treat certain inflammatory conditions.

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