posted on 2022-10-26, 19:04authored byRobert
D. Barrows, Daniel E. Jeffries, Mahesh Vishe, Hanna Tukachinsky, Shao-Liang Zheng, Fanfan Li, Zhenjie Ma, Xiaolei Li, Shujuan Jin, Haobin Song, Ruonan Zhang, Shaofeng Zhang, Jing Ni, Haofei Luan, Lei Wen, Yan Rongshan, Chen Ying, Matthew D. Shair
NNMT
uses SAM as a cofactor to catalyze the methylation of nicotinamide,
producing 1-methylnicotinamide. Recent studies have shown that NNMT
upregulation in cancer-associated fibroblasts (CAFs) is required to
maintain the CAF phenotype in high-grade serous carcinoma. These observations
suggest that NNMT should be evaluated as a therapeutic target, especially
in cancer. Although several small-molecule inhibitors of NNMT have
been identified, there remains a need for highly potent and selective
inhibitors with excellent in vivo activity and ADME properties that
can be used as reliable chemical probes. We have identified azaindoline
carboxamide 38 as a selective and potent NNMT inhibitor
with favorable PK/PD and safety profiles as well as excellent oral
bioavailability and pharmaceutical properties. Our mechanistic studies
indicate that 38 binds uncompetitively with SAM but competitively
with nicotinamide consistent with its binding in the nicotinamide
binding site and likely forming a positive interaction with SAM.