Discovery of an Oral, Rule of 5 Compliant, Interleukin 17A Protein–Protein Interaction Modulator for the Potential Treatment of Psoriasis and Other Inflammatory Diseases
Mark D. Andrews, Kevin N. Dack, Marcel J. de Groot, Maja Lambert, Carl Johan Sennbro, Mogens Larsen, Martin Stahlhut
Abstract
Interleukin 17A (IL-17A) is an interleukin cytokine whose dysregulation is implicated in autoimmune disorders such as psoriasis, and monoclonal antibodies against the IL-17A pathway are now well-established and very effective treatments. This article outlines the work that led to the identification of 23 as an oral, small-molecule protein–protein interaction modulator (PPIm) clinical development candidate. Protein crystallography provided knowledge of the key binding interactions between small-molecule ligands and the IL-17A dimer, and this helped in the multiparameter optimization toward identifying an orally bioavailable, Rule of 5 compliant PPIm of IL-17A. Overlap of early ligands led to a series of benzhydrylglycine-containing compounds that allowed the identification of dimethylpyrazole as a key substituent that gave PPIm with oral bioavailability. Exploration of the amino acid portion of the structure then led to dicyclopropylalanine as a group that gave potent and metabolically stable compounds, including the development candidate 23.