posted on 2020-10-13, 16:05authored byJian Liu, Younong Yu, Joseph Kelly, Deyou Sha, Abdul-Basit Alhassan, Wensheng Yu, Milana M. Maletic, Joseph L. Duffy, Daniel J. Klein, M. Katharine Holloway, Steve Carroll, Bonnie J. Howell, Richard J. O. Barnard, Scott Wolkenberg, Joseph A. Kozlowski
The selectivity of histone deacetylase
inhibitors (HDACis) is greatly
impacted by the zinc binding groups. In an effort to search for novel
zinc binding groups, we applied a parallel medicinal chemistry (PMC)
strategy to quickly synthesize substituted benzamide libraries. We
discovered a series containing 2-substituted benzamides as the zinc
binding group which afforded highly selective and potent HDAC3 inhibitors,
exemplified by compound 16 with a 2-methylthiobenzamide.
Compound 16 inhibited HDAC3 with an IC50 of
30 nM and with unprecedented selectivity of >300-fold over all
other
HDAC isoforms. Interestingly, a subtle change of the 2-methylthio
to a 2-hydroxy benzamide in 20 retains HDAC3 potency
but loses all selectivity over HDAC 1 and 2. This significant difference
in selectivity was rationalized by X-ray crystal structures of HDACis 16 and 20 bound to HDAC2, revealing different
binding modes to the catalytic zinc ion. This series of HDAC3 selective
inhibitors served as tool compounds for investigating the minimal
set of HDAC isoforms that must be inhibited for the HIV latency activation
in a Jurkat 2C4 cell model and potentially as leads for selective
HDAC3 inhibitors for other indications.