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      Acyl ureas as human liver glycogen phosphorylase inhibitors for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.

      Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
      Adenosine Monophosphate, chemistry, Allosteric Site, Animals, Binding Sites, Crystallography, X-Ray, Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2, drug therapy, Glycogen Phosphorylase, Liver Form, antagonists & inhibitors, Glycogen Phosphorylase, Muscle Form, Hepatocytes, drug effects, enzymology, Humans, In Vitro Techniques, Models, Molecular, Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationship, Rabbits, Rats, Urea, analogs & derivatives, chemical synthesis

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          Abstract

          Using a focused screening approach, acyl ureas have been discovered as a new class of inhibitors of human liver glycogen phosphorylase (hlGPa). The X-ray structure of screening hit 1 (IC50 = 2 microM) in a complex with rabbit muscle glycogen phosphorylase b reveals that 1 binds at the AMP site, the main allosteric effector site of the dimeric enzyme. A first cycle of chemical optimization supported by X-ray structural data yielded derivative 21, which inhibited hlGPa with an IC50 of 23 +/- 1 nM, but showed only moderate cellular activity in isolated rat hepatocytes (IC50 = 6.2 microM). Further optimization was guided by (i) a 3D pharmacophore model that was derived from a training set of 24 compounds and revealed the key chemical features for the biological activity and (ii) the 1.9 angstroms crystal structure of 21 in complex with hlGPa. A second set of compounds was synthesized and led to 42 with improved cellular activity (hlGPa IC50 = 53 +/- 1 nM; hepatocyte IC50 = 380 nM). Administration of 42 to anaesthetized Wistar rats caused a significant reduction of the glucagon-induced hyperglycemic peak. These findings are consistent with the inhibition of hepatic glycogenolysis and support the use of acyl ureas for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.

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