posted on 2013-05-09, 00:00authored byJeremy S. Disch, Ghotas Evindar, Cynthia H. Chiu, Charles
A. Blum, Han Dai, Lei Jin, Eli Schuman, Kenneth E. Lind, Svetlana L. Belyanskaya, Jianghe Deng, Frank Coppo, Leah Aquilani, Todd L. Graybill, John W. Cuozzo, Siva Lavu, Cheney Mao, George P. Vlasuk, Robert B. Perni
The
sirtuins SIRT1, SIRT2, and SIRT3 are NAD+ dependent
deacetylases that are considered potential targets for metabolic,
inflammatory, oncologic, and neurodegenerative disorders. Encoded
library technology (ELT) was used to affinity screen a 1.2 million
heterocycle enriched library of DNA encoded small molecules, which
identified pan-inhibitors of SIRT1/2/3 with nanomolar potency (e.g., 11c: IC50 = 3.6, 2.7, and 4.0 nM for SIRT1, SIRT2,
and SIRT3, respectively). Subsequent SAR studies to improve physiochemical
properties identified the potent drug like analogues 28 and 31. Crystallographic studies of 11c, 28, and 31 bound in the SIRT3 active
site revealed that the common carboxamide binds in the nicotinamide
C-pocket and the aliphatic portions of the inhibitors extend through
the substrate channel, explaining the observable SAR. These pan SIRT1/2/3
inhibitors, representing a novel chemotype, are significantly more
potent than currently available inhibitors, which makes them valuable
tools for sirtuin research.