Issue 28, 2022

Development of potent cholinesterase inhibitors based on a marine pharmacophore

Abstract

The management of neurological disorders such as dementia associated with Alzheimer's or Parkinson's disease includes the use of cholinesterase inhibitors. These compounds can slow down the progression of these diseases and can also be used in the treatment of glaucoma and myasthenia gravis. The majority of the cholinesterase inhibitors used in the clinic are derived from natural products and our current paper describes the use of a small marine pharmacophore to develop potent and selective cholinesterase inhibitors. Fourteen small inhibitors were designed based on recent discoveries about the inhibitory potential of a range of related marine secondary metabolites. The compounds were evaluated, in kinetic enzymatic assays, for their ability to inhibit three different cholinesterase enzymes and it was shown that compounds with a high inhibitory activity towards electric eel and human recombinant acetylcholinesterase (IC50 between 20–70 μM) could be prepared. It was also shown that this compound class was particularly active against horse serum butyrylcholinesterase, with IC50 values between 0.8–16 μM, which is an order of magnitude more potent than the clinically used positive control neostigmine. The compounds were further tested for off-target toxicity against both human umbilical vein endothelial cells and bovine and human erythrocytes and were shown to display a low mammalian cellular toxicity. Overall, the study illustrates how the brominated dipeptide marine pharmacophore can be used as a versatile natural scaffold for the design of potent, and selective cholinesterase inhibitors.

Graphical abstract: Development of potent cholinesterase inhibitors based on a marine pharmacophore

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
08 Jun 2022
Accepted
01 Jul 2022
First published
01 Jul 2022

Org. Biomol. Chem., 2022,20, 5589-5601

Development of potent cholinesterase inhibitors based on a marine pharmacophore

V. Elumalai, T. Trobec, M. Grundner, C. Labriere, R. Frangež, K. Sepčić, J. H. Hansen and J. Svenson, Org. Biomol. Chem., 2022, 20, 5589 DOI: 10.1039/D2OB01064J

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