Design, synthesis, and evaluation of l -cystine diamides as l -cystine crystallization inhibitors for cystinuria

Design, synthesis, and evaluation of l -cystine diamides as l -cystine crystallization inhibitors for cystinuria

Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters 28 (2018) 1303–1308 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters jour...

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Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters 28 (2018) 1303–1308

Contents lists available at ScienceDirect

Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/bmcl

Design, synthesis, and evaluation of L-cystine diamides as L-cystine crystallization inhibitors for cystinuria Yanhui Yang a, Haifa Albanyan a, Sumi Lee a, Herve Aloysius a, Jian-Jie Liang b, Vladyslav Kholodovych c, Amrik Sahota d, Longqin Hu a,⇑ a

Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, 160 Frelinghuysen Road, Piscataway, NJ 08854, United States Dassault Systemes BioVIA Corp, San Diego, CA 92121, United States High Performance and Research Computing, Office of Advanced Research Computing, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, NJ 08854, United States d Department of Genetics, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, Piscataway, NJ 08854, United States b c

a r t i c l e

i n f o

Article history: Received 9 January 2018 Revised 4 March 2018 Accepted 9 March 2018 Available online 10 March 2018 Keywords: Cystine diamide Cystinuria Crystallization inhibition Molecular imposter

a b s t r a c t To overcome the chemical and metabolic stability issues of L-cystine dimethyl ester (CDME) and L-cystine methyl ester (CME), a series of L-cystine diamides with or without Na-methylation was designed, synthesized, and evaluated for their inhibitory activity of L-cystine crystallization. L-Cystine diamides 2a–i without Na-methylation were found to be potent inhibitors of L-cystine crystallization while Na-methylation of L-cystine diamides resulted in derivatives 3b–i devoid of any inhibitory activity of L-cystine crystallization. Computational modeling indicates that Na-methylation leads to significant decrease in binding of the L-cystine diamides to L-cystine crystal surface. Among the L-cystine diamides 2a–i, L-cystine bismorpholide (CDMOR, LH707, 2g) and L-cystine bis(N0 -methylpiperazide) (CDNMP, LH708, 2h) are the most potent inhibitors of L-cystine crystallization. Ó 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Cystinuria is an inherited disease caused by a defect in the reabsorption of cystine and dibasic amino acids in the renal proximal tubule.1–3 The transporter responsible for the reabsorption is a heterodimer consisting of rBAT and b0,+ AT subunits. Mutations in either of the two subunits can result in abnormal transport of Lcystine and other dibasic amino acids from the luminal fluid of the renal proximal tubule and intestines, leading to elevated concentrations of these amino acids in the urine of affected individuals causing cystinuria.4 While dibasic amino acids such as lysine, ornithine, and arginine are completely soluble in urine, L-cystine has limited aqueous solubility, leading to its crystallization in urine and formation of L-cystine stones in the patient’s kidney, ureter, and bladder. Even though the incidence of L-cystine stones is much lower than that of calcium oxalate stones, L-cystine stones are larger, occur at a young age, recur more frequently, and are more likely to cause chronic kidney disease.5 Clinical treatment of cystinuria has not changed over the last 30 years. Current approaches are aimed at reducing the concentration of free L-cystine in urine and increasing its solubility.6 A high fluid intake of around 4–5 L a day and urine alkalinization with citrate or bicarbonate salts can suppress but may not completely

⇑ Corresponding author. E-mail address: [email protected] (L. Hu). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bmcl.2018.03.024 0960-894X/Ó 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

prevent stone formation. For severe cases, drug therapy can be used, utilizing the chemical reaction of D-penicillamine or a-mercaptopropionylglycine with L-cystine to generate more soluble mixed disulfides.5,7 These drugs have side effects including loss of taste, fever, proteinuria, serum sickness-type reactions, and even frank nephritic syndrome.7 Following a study by Ward and co-workers that L-cystine dimethyl ester (CDME) and L-cystine methyl ester (CME), can bind to L-cystine crystal surfaces, acting as molecular imposters to slow down the crystallization of L-cystine,8 we recently reported the discovery of two novel L-cystine diamides that have been shown to be more effective than CDME as tailored L-cystine crystal growth inhibitors and with significantly better stability and in vivo activity profile.9 Herein, we present the design, synthesis, and evaluation of a small focused library of L-cystine diamides for the initial structure-activity relationship study that led to the discovery of the two potent inhibitors of L-cystine crystallization.

Design principle CDME (1) is a dimethyl ester. Esters are known to be unstable in vivo and susceptible to esterase-mediated hydrolysis. For this reason, esters are commonly used prodrug forms and are readily converted in vivo to their precursor carboxylic acids.10,11 Upon

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hydrolysis, CDME would be converted to L-cystine, the amino acid that is already in high concentration and causes stone formation in cystinuria patients. These concerns about CDME (1) prompted us to design the more stable amide derivatives of L-cystine. As shown in Fig. 1, a series of amide modification on the two acarboxylates of L-cystine were designed to derive the various diamides (2), while a small methyl group was introduced to obtain a series of N,N0 -dimethyl L-cystine diamide derivatives 3 to explore the effect of substitution at the a-amino groups of L-cystine on their ability to inhibit L-cystine crystallization. A total of 16 Lcystine derivatives were designed. Chemical synthesis As shown in Scheme 1, L-cystine diamides (2a–i) were readily synthesized through the amidation of Boc-protected L-cystine 6

using activated OSu or OBt ester and subsequent deprotection of Boc using 50% TFA in CH2Cl2 or 4 equiv. of 4 N HCl in dioxane, as we reported previously.9 Amidation using activated esters was found to give better reaction yields and fewer side products. The overall yields of the three step sequence ranged from 10% to 50%. Several conditions were initially explored to directly methylate but failed to obtain N,N0 -dimethyl L-cystine. Later, we first obtained N-methyl L-cysteine through Na/NH3 reduction of L-thiazolidine-4-carboxylic acid (4) and then air oxidized the N-methyl cysteine in the presence of catalytic iron (III) chloride to afford the desired N,N0 -dimethyl L-cystine 5.12,13 Protection of the secondary amine with Boc anhydride afforded 7, which was activated through its activated ester and formed amides with a series of amines. The target N,N0 -dimethyl L-cystine diamides 3b–i were obtained in 10–30% overall yield upon final Boc deprotection. L-cystine

Fig. 1. Design of L-cystine diamides (2 and 3).

Scheme 1. Synthesis of L-cystine diamides (2a–i) and N,N0 -dimethyl L-cystine diamides (3b–i) from Boc-L-cystine (6) or L-thiazolidine-4-carboxylic acid (4). Reaction conditions: i) Na, NH3 liquid; ii) air, FeCl3, pH 9; iii) (Boc)2O; iv) HOAt, EDC, DIEA; v) HNRR’; vi) 4 N HCl/dioxane.

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In order to determine the effects of L-cystine diamides synthesized on the apparent aqueous solubility of L-cystine, a supersaturated solution of L-cystine was prepared in Millipore water according to the literature method.8 Then, 1 mM and 200 lM solutions of each L-cystine diamide synthesized were added to a supersaturated solution of L-cystine in water (1:100) to give supersaturated solutions of L-cystine containing 10 lM and 2 lM of a L-cystine diamide, respectively. The mixtures were then allowed to incubate at 25 °C for 72 h; the apparent solubility of Lcystine in the presence of 10 lM and 2 lM of each compound was then determined using the fluorescence assay we developed.9 CDME was used as a positive control and water was used as a blank control. As shown in Fig. 2, all L-cystine diamides 2a–i have equal or better activity than CDME at increasing the apparent aqueous solubility of L-cystine and thus inhibiting L-cystine crystallization while the corresponding methylated analogs, N,N0 -dimethyl L-cystine diamides (3b–i), have little or no effect on the apparent aqueous solubility of L-cystine as compared to water control. The failure of N,N0 -dimethyl L-cystine diamides 3b–i to inhibit crystallization of L-cystine could be due to the fact that the N-methyl substituent adversely affected intermolecular interaction (charge-charge and hydrogen bonding) between the methylated ammonium ions (ANH2(Me)+) of N,N0 -dimethyl L-cystine diamides 3b–i and the carboxylates (ACOO–) of L-cystine as discussed later in our modeling studies. The methylated L-cystine diamides 3b–i cannot bind to the cystine crystal surfaces and, thus, cannot inhibit the crystallization of L-cystine. As illustrated in Fig. 2, five of the non-methylated L-cystine diamides, namely L-cystine dicyclopropylamide (CDCPA, LH704, 2d), bispiperidine (CDPIP, LH706, 2f), L-cystine bismorpholide (CDMOR, LH707, 2g), L-cystine bis(N0 -methylpiperazide) (CDNMP, LH708, 2h), and L-cystine diethanolamide (CDEOA, LH709, 2i), were shown to have better activity than the positive control compound CDME and were selected for further dose-response characterization. In order to rank the test compounds, we determined the dose-response curves of the five L-cystine diamides in comparison to CDME and calculated EC2x, the effective concentration required

to double the apparent solubility of L-cystine in water. As shown in Fig. 3 and Table 1, all five L-cystine diamides were shown to have better EC2x than CDME with L-cystine bismorpholide (CDMOR, LH707, 2g) and L-cystine bis(N0 -methylpiperazide) (CDNMP, LH708, 2h) being the most potent. CDMOR (2g) has an EC2x about 7-fold lower than CDME (0.86 vs 6.37 lM) while CDNMP (2h) is 24-fold more potent than CDME (EC2x of 0.26 vs 6.37 lM) at increasing the aqueous solubility of L-cystine. The upper plateau for 2g is lower than those for 2d, 2h, 2i, and CDME, but this can be attributed to a lower L-cystine concentration in the initial supersaturated solution used to test 2g, as we explained previously.9

Molecular modeling The crystal morphology calculation and various adsorption/docking experiments were performed using BIOVIA’s Materials

CDME 2d 2g 2h 2i

3.5

3.0

[L-Cystine] (mM)

Effects of L-cystine diamides on the apparent aqueous solubility of L-cystine

2.5

2.0

1.5

L-cystine

1.0 10-8

10-7

10-6

10-5

10-4

[Inhibitor] (M) Fig. 3. Effect of CDME and select L-cystine diamides 2d, 2g, 2h and 2i on the aqueous concentration of L-cystine. The error bars represent the standard deviation calculated from the triplicate measurements.

Fig. 2. Effect of L-cystine diamides (2 and 3) on the aqueous solubility of L-cystine in comparison to CDME (1) and water controls.

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Table 1 Effects of L-cystine diamides on the aqueous solubility of L-cystine in comparison to CDME. Compound

Structure

Effect on L-cystine aqueous solubility

EBinding (kcal/mol)c

EC2xa (lM)

Ratiob

CDME

6.37

1.0

316

CDAA (LH701, 2a)

+d

+d

287

CDMA (LH702, 2b)

+d

+d

296

CDEA (LH703, 2c)

+d

+d

288

CDCPA (LH704, 2d)

3.53

1.8

292

CDPYR (LH705, 2e)

+d

+d

302

CDPIP (LH706, 2f)

1.59

4.0

307

CDMOR (LH707, 2g)

0.86

7.4

324

CDNMP (LH708, 2h)

0.26

24.5

429

CDEOA (LH709, 2i)

2.02

3.2

307

Me2-CDMA (LH710, 3b)

e

e

264

Me2-CDEA (LH711, 3c)

e

e

235

Me2-CDCPA (LH712, 3d)

e

e

260

Me2-CDPYR (LH713, 3e)

e

e

247

Me2-CDPIP (LH714, 3f)

e

e

234

Me2-CDMOR (LH715, 3g)

e

e

267

Me2-CDEOA (LH716, 3i)

e

e

273

a

EC2x refers to the concentration required to double the aqueous solubility of L-cystine. Ratio refers to the improvement in potency over the control CDME. The binding energies in kcal/mol for the binding of test compound to cystine crystal surface {1 0 0} were computed using the COMPASS forcefield in BIOVIA’s Materials Studio software after Monte Carlo searches of the configurational space for possible adsorption configuration in the presence of explicit water molecules (see experimental methods for details). It corresponds to the total non-bond energy (sum of van der Waals and electrostatic) released upon adsorption of the test molecule. H-bond interaction energy, when present, is included implicitly in the non-bond energy. d The effect on the aqueous solubility of L-cystine was similar to that of the control CDME and the expected EC2x would be similar to that of CDME, but was not measured. e There was no effect observed on the aqueous solubility of L-cystine at either 2 or 10 lM b

c

Studio software suite. The {1 0 0} set of faces had been identified to be the fast-growing faces. Binding energies of the L-cystine diamides onto the {1 0 0} surface of L-cystine crystal are listed in

Table 1. The Bravais-Friedel Donnay-Harker (BFDH) calculated platelet morphology (data not shown) agrees well with the experimentally observed morphology.8,14 The BFDH approach does not

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Fig. 4. Structure configurations of CDPIP (LH706, 2f) and Me2-CDPIP (LH714, 3f), respectively, adsorbed onto the {1 0 0} surface of L-cystine crystal (in ball-n-stick representation). CDPIP and Me2-CDPIP molecules are in CPK representation at 70% of vdW radii; solvent (H2O) molecules are in line representation. The methyl groups in Me2CDPIP are circled in green. Insets are made to show hydrogen bonding details (circled in yellow), with the CDPIP and Me2-CDPIP shown in line representation). Red: oxygen; grey: carbon; white: hydrogen; blue: nitrogen; yellow: sulfur.

consider solvent effect; the fact that the computed morphology (with no solvent present) agrees with the experimentally observed in the presence of solvent (water) points to a strong inter-molecular interaction between the L-cystine molecules, which makes the L-cystine-water

molecular interaction obscured in the L-cystine crystal morphology development. This is different from cases where intermolecular interactions inside the crystal is relatively weak compared to surface-solvent interactions. As identified in the BFDH result and elsewhere,8 the {1 0 0} set of symmetry-related faces are fast-growing, giving rise to large relative surface area of the basal surfaces of {0 0 1}. Therefore, in order to inhibit growth, attachment of the feeding L-cystine molecules onto the fast growing {1 0 0} surfaces will need to be inhibited, as demonstrated experimentally in our study and in the previous CDME study.8 Various crystal growth mechanisms had been proposed, including formation of islands, terrace, attachment to steps, and kinks.15 Fundamental to these mechanisms is molecular binding to the surface/interface in study. Therefore, in part to establish a protocol for screening potential inhibitors, the present modeling effort focused on calculating binding energy of candidate inhibitors onto the fastgrowing {1 0 0} surface of L-cystine crystal. Binding energies reported in Tables 1 contains results from modeling in the presence of solvent (water). Results obtained in the presence of water differ only slightly from that obtained in the absence of solvents. This is primarily due to the fact that, in adsorbed configuration, there is very little solvent-accessible space for the solvent to penetrate and assert its solvent dielectric shielding effect. We want to emphasize here that there are many other important roles a solvent can play, such as forming hydration shells around depositing molecules, and formation of electrical double layers covering the growing surfaces, all being important factors governing crystal growth/dissolution, but in the meantime are beyond the scope of the present work. From this point on when referring to binding energies, they were all calculated in the presence of explicit water molecules. It corresponds to the total non-bond energy (sum of van der Waals and electrostatic including H-bond interaction energy, when pre-

sent) released upon adsorption of the test molecule. The binding energy of an L-cystine molecule onto the {1 0 0} surface of L-cystine crystal is 85.8 kcal/mol per molecule (not shown in Table 1). This value is substantially greater in magnitude than the energy released, 58.2 kcal/mol, for an L-cystine molecule coming off from a layer of L-cystine molecules on the {1 0 0} surface. This elevated binding energy can be explained by the fact that a single L-cystine molecule has greater degree of freedom in adjusting its configuration to maximize binding onto the surface than when packed into individual layers onto the {1 0 0} surfaces. All the L-cystine derivatives considered have binding energies greater in magnitude than the L-cystine reference. The L-cystine diamides 2a–i and CDME, have surface binding energies between 287 and 429 kcal/mol. In particular, the binding energy of 2h is 43% greater in magnitude than CDME, which may explain the much greater inhibition efficiency observed experimentally. It is worth pointing out that, unlike other cystine derivatives, 2h has a large proportion (42%) of binding energy coming from the two N-methylpiperazine groups. Binding energies of dimethylated Lcystine diamides 3b–i are considerably lower than those of their corresponding unmethylated counterparts, averaging 47.6 ± 15.9 kcal/mol lower. This is consistent with our experimental data showing that all dimethylated L-cystine diamides 3b–i had no effect on the apparent aqueous solubility of L-cystine. The reduced binding energies of the dimethylated L-cystine diamides can be explained by the steric hindrance of the methyl groups. Fig. 4 shows a comparison of structural configurations of 2f and 3f, respectively, when the respective molecules are adsorbed onto the {1 0 0} surface of L-cystine. In the L-cystine crystal itself,16 the NH  O hydrogen bonds, formed between the ammonium and carboxylate moieties, plays an important role in binding the L-cystine molecules together. The same hydrogen bonds are formed between the ammonium moiety from the L-cystine derivatives and the carboxylate moiety in the L-cystine on the crystal surface. In the inset showing hydrogen bonding details for the unmethylated 2f adsorption onto the {1 0 0} surface of L-cystine (Fig. 4A), a total of three hydrogen bonds (indicated by blue dashed lines) were formed between the 2f molecule and three different L-cystine

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molecules; in the methylated analog (3f) (Fig. 4B), the ammonium moieties were shielded by the methyl groups, and could only form one hydrogen bond with the carboxylate moiety in the substrate. Such difference could explain the 18% drop in adsorption energy onto the substrate upon methylation of 2f to 3f (Table 1). In summary, we designed and synthesized a series of L-cystine diamides with or without Na-methylation and evaluated their inhibitory activity of L-cystine crystallization. L-Cystine diamides 2a–i without Na-methylation were found to be potent inhibitors of Lcystine crystallization while Na-methylation of L-cystine diamides resulted in derivatives 3b–i without any inhibitory activity of Lcystine crystallization. Computational modeling indicates that Na-methylation leads to a significant decrease in binding energy of the L-cystine diamides onto the fast-growing more effective than CDME in increasing the aqueous {1 0 0} surface of L-cystine crystal. Among the L-cystine diamides 2a–i without Na-methylation, Lcystine bismorpholide (CDMOR, LH707, 2g) and L-cystine bis(N0 methylpiperazide) (CDNMP, LH708, 2h) are the most potent inhibitors of L-cystine crystallization. They are 7–24 times more potent than CMDE in inhibiting the crystallization of L-cystine. As we reported previously,9 both 2g and 2h are more stable than CDME and 2h has been shown to effectively inhibited L-cystine stone formation in vivo in a genetic mouse model of cystinuria.

Acknowledgment We gratefully acknowledge the financial support of grant DK112782 from the National Institutes of Health. References 1. Andreassen KH, Pedersen KV, Osther SS, Jung HU, Lildal SK, Osther PJS. Urolithiasis. 2016;44:65. 2. Pereira DJ, Schoolwerth AC, Pais VM. Clin Nephrol. 2015;83:138. 3. Saravakos P, Kokkinou V, Giannatos E. Urology. 2014;83:693. 4. Strologo LD, Pras E, Pontesilli C, et al. J Am Soc Nephrol. 2002;13:2547. 5. Moe OW. Lancet. 2006;367:333. 6. Mattoo A, Goldfarb DS. Semin Nephrol. 2008;28:181. 7. Becker G. Nephrology. 2007;12:S4. 8. Rimer JD, An Z, Zhu Z, et al. Science (New York, N.Y.). 2010;330:337. 9. Hu L, Yang Y, Aloysius H, et al. J Med Chem. 2016;59:7293. 10. Rautio J, Kumpulainen H, Heimbach T, et al. Nat Rev Drug Discovery. 2008;7:255. 11. Hu L. 2nd ed. In: Wang B, Hu L, Siahaa TJ, editors. Drug Delivery: Principles and Applications. New Jersey: Wiley & Sons; 2016:227. 12. Casey JP, Martin RB. J Am Chem Soc. 1972;94:6141. 13. Menger FM, Caran KL. J Am Chem Soc. 2000;122:11679. 14. Poloni LN, Zhu Z, Garcia-Vázquez N, et al. Cryst Growth Des. 2017;17:2767. 15. De Yoreo JJ, Vekilov PG. Rev Mineral Geochem. 2003;54:57. 16. Moggach SA, Allan DR, Parsons S, Sawyer L, Warren JEJ. Synchrotron Rad. 2005;12:598.