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Identification of small molecules that selectively inhibit fluconazole-resistant Candida albicans in the presence of fluconazole but not in its absence - Probe 2

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Author Information and Affiliations

Received: ; Last Update: December 12, 2011.

The effectiveness of the potent antifungal drug fluconazole has been compromised by the rise of drug-resistant fungal pathogens. It has been observed that inhibition of Hsp90 can reverse drug resistance in Candida; however, it is challenging to find fungal-specific inhibitors of Hsp90 that do not also impair the human host protein. The Molecular Libraries Probe Production Centers Network (MLPCN) library was screened in duplicate dosings to identify compounds that selectively reverse fluconazole resistance in a Candida albicans clinical isolate, while having no antifungal activity when administered as a single agent. An indazole compound (CID3243873) was identified as meeting most of the probe criteria, and subsequent SAR identified a more potent analog as a new probe compound (ML212).

Assigned Assay Grant No: 1 R03 MH086456-01

Screening Center Name & PI: Broad institute Probe Development Center, Stuart Schreiber, PhD

Chemistry Center Name & PI: Broad institute Probe Development Center, Stuart Schreiber, PhD

Assay Submitter & Institution: Susan Lindquist, PhD, Whitehead Institute, Cambridge, MA

PubChem Summary Bioassay Identifier (AID): 2007

Probe Structure & Characteristics

Compound Summary

IUPAC Chemical Namemethyl 2-(3-(3-methoxyphenyl)-1H-indazol-1-yl)acetate
PubChem CID49835877
Molecular Weight296.32
Molecular FormulaC17H16N2O3
ClogP3.68
H-Bond Donor0
H-Bond Acceptor4
Rotatable Bond Count5
Exact Mass296.1161
Topological Polar Surface Area51.13
CID/ML No.Target NameIC50 (nM) [SID, AID]Anti-Target NamesIC50 (nM) [SID, AID]Fold Selective*Secondary Assay(s) IC50 (nM) [SID, AID]
49835877/212CaCi-2 growth inhibition440 [103910843, 493080]Fibroblast toxicity>26,000 [103910843, 493147]59CaCi-8 growth inhibition 1210 [103910843, 493149]
Activity without fluconazole>26,000 [103910843, 493070]59
*

Selectivity = Anti-target IC50/Target IC50

Recommendations for the scientific use of this probe

Acquired drug resistance by medically relevant microorganisms poses a grave threat to human health and has enormous economic consequences. Fungal pathogens present a particular challenge because they are eukaryotes and share many of the same mechanisms that support the growth and survival of the human host cells they infect. The number of drug classes that have unique targets in fungi is very limited, and the usefulness of current antifungal drugs is compromised by either dose-limiting host toxicity or the frequent emergence of high-grade resistance.

The objective of this project is to discover compounds capable of reversing fungal drug resistance, thereby making currently available antifungal drugs more effective and reducing dosage-related side effects. Inhibition of the molecular chaperone Hsp90 is one approach that can abrogate drug resistance in diverse fungi including species of both Candida and Aspergillus (1). At concentrations that demonstrate no antifungal activity on their own, classical Hsp90 inhibitors dramatically reduce azole antibiotic resistance of clinical isolates and transform conventional fungistatic azole compounds into fungicidal drug combinations. This probe could greatly improve the ability to control otherwise lethal fungal infections in severely immunocompromised hosts, especially cancer patients undergoing high-dose chemotherapy and/or bone marrow transplantation. This high-throughput screen (HTS) project seeks to identify novel small molecules that can prevent fungal growth in combination with a sublethal dose of fluconazole.

1. Introduction

Scientific Rationale

The molecular chaperone Hsp90 has been previously linked to the evolution of antifungal drug resistance in various fungal strains (1). In these studies, the inhibition of Hsp90 can abrogate drug resistance in diverse fungi, including species of both Candida and Aspergillus. At concentrations that demonstrate no antifungal activity on their own, classical Hsp90 inhibitors dramatically reduce azole antibiotic resistance of clinical isolates and transform conventional fungistatic azole compounds into fungicidal treatments (1).

The resistance phenotype mediated by a wide variety of specific mutations is contingent on intact Hsp90-dependent fungal stress responses (1). Such responses allow the organism to tolerate the stresses imposed by drug exposure itself and/or accommodate mutations that mediate drug resistance. For example, genetic compromise of the key fungal stress signaling molecule calcineurin, itself an Hsp90 client protein, faithfully phenocopies the effects of Hsp90 inhibition (1). Modulators of the fungal stress response could greatly improve the ability to control otherwise lethal fungal infections in immunocompromised hosts, especially cancer patients undergoing high-dose chemotherapy and/or bone marrow transplant procedures.

Although Hsp90 or calcineurin inhibitors under current development appear to be well-tolerated in early phase cancer clinical trials, compromise of host chaperone protein function could have very deleterious effects in the context of active infection and the associated stresses of fever and cardiovascular instability. For example, host immune response is compromised by treatment with nonselective calcineurin inhibitors such as cyclosporin A and FK506. An obvious way to avoid this problem would be the identification of fungal-specific inhibitors that do not impair the host chaperone protein. To address these concerns, this project seeks to identify new fungal-selective chemosensitizers. In particular, the design of the screening cascade will also allow capture of compounds targeting still other, as yet unknown, components of fungal stress response pathways that enable the emergence and maintenance of resistance to current antifungal drugs. Facilitating this strategy, secondary binning assays were included in the screening path and were designed to characterize the phenotypic hits by their species specificity (fungal vs. human cells) and by apparent mode of action (Hsp90-related, calcineurin-related, or Unknown/Other mechanism).

Several compounds have been previously identified as chemosensitizers, increasing the susceptibility of various C.albicans strains to fluconazole treatment (2,3,4,5). Cernicka et al. previously reported that the compound 7-chlorotetrazolo[5,1-c]benzo[1,2,4]triazine (CTBT, Figure 1) was capable of chemosensitizing C.albicans strains to fluconazole (3). Against fluconazole-susceptible C.albicans strain 90028 and fluconazole-resistant C.albicans strain Gu5, CTBT was effective with an MIC value of 2.4 μM when combined with fluconazole. In the absence of fluconazole, CTBT demonstrated no activity against C.albicans strain 90028, but did inhibit growth of C.albicans strain Gu5 at concentrations greater than 2.4 μM. The anti-arrhythmic drug amiodarone was recently demonstrated to act synergistically with fluconazole in C.albicans with MIC values ranging between 1.6 μM to 18.8 μM (4). Plagiochin E, a natural product isolated from liverwort, increased yeast susceptibility to fluconazole at 2.4 μM (5). These agents were not considered for the current project because of their documented single-agent antifungal activity (amiodarone an MIC50 of 3.1 μM [6]); plagiochin E an IC50 value of 3.8 μM [5]).

Figure 1. Chemosensitizing Agents for Reversing Fluconazole Resistance.

Figure 1

Chemosensitizing Agents for Reversing Fluconazole Resistance.

The most potent compounds currently known are several HDAC inhibitors previously reported by Mai et al. (7). As depicted in Figure 2, compounds 4 and 5 are uracil-derived hydroxamic acids that exhibited MIC values ranging from 1.2 μM to 1.4 μM when combined with fluconazole. When tested independently, neither compound demonstrated activity against C. albicans at concentrations up to 368 μM. When compounds 4 and 5 were evaluated in a biochemical binding assay with murine HDAC1, their IC50 values were measured at 37 nM and 51 nM, respectively (7). In addition, closely related analogs inhibit human HDAC1 and HDAC4 and were further shown to possess antiproliferative and cytotoxic effects against several human cell lines (8,9). These findings strongly suggest that compounds 4 and 5 would not be particularly selective for fungal protein targets, diminishing their potential as fungal-selective chemosensitizers. At the present time, compounds 4 and 5 have not been registered with MLSMR, are not sold commercially, and as such, are not available for evaluation in the current investigation. Ideally, screening the MLPCN compound collection would yield novel chemical hits that work by new modes of action that could be investigated by the Assay Provider, but one back-up option that is available is to identify fungal selective HDAC inhibitors.

Figure 2. Uracil-derived HDAC Inhibitors Capable of Reversing Antifungal Drug Resistance.

Figure 2

Uracil-derived HDAC Inhibitors Capable of Reversing Antifungal Drug Resistance.

2. Materials and Methods

Compounds that can successfully inhibit Candida CaCi-2 cell growth in the presence of sublethal doses of fluconazole as measured in a fluorescence reporter assay were further tested against a highly-resistant Candida CaCi-8 strain in the presence of fluconazole. Those that inhibited growth in the resistant strain were also tested for toxicity against Candida in the absence of fluconazole and for toxicity against mammalian cells using a fluorescence reporter assay. The positive control for screening in the Candida and mammalian cell assays was the Hsp90 inhibitor geldanamycin (acting in concert with fluconazole; see Figure 3). Compounds that passed these four hurdles were binned through use of a Saccharomyces assay to determine whether the mechanism of action might be through the Hsp90 pathway, the calcineurin pathway, or an uncategorized mechanism.

Figure 3. Positive Controls for Biological Assays.

Figure 3

Positive Controls for Biological Assays.

2.1. Assays

A summary listing of completed assays and corresponding PubChem AID numbers is provided in Appendix A (Table A1). Refer to Appendix B for the detailed assay protocols.

2.1.1. Primary CaCi-2 (AID No. 1979), CaCi-2 Dose-Response Retest (AID Nos. 2467, 488836)

Materials and Reagents

Clear, flat-bottom, black, 384-well plates were obtained from Corning (Catalog no. 3712BC, Lot no. 35808016). Geldanamycin (Catalog no. G-1047) was obtained from AG Scientific and prepared in 15 mM stock solution in DMSO (control). Fluconazole was obtained from Sequoia Research Products Ltd. and prepared in a 2 mg/ml stock solution in phosphate buffered saline (PBS). Alamar Blue was obtained from Biosource International (Catalog no. DAL1100, Lot no. 151016SA). PBS (Catalog no. 21-040-CV) without calcium and magnesium was obtained from Cellgro. Penicillin/Streptomycin (Pen/Strep) was obtained from Gibco and prepared 100X in PBS.

Synthetic Defined Growth Medium

RPMI 1640 medium, (powder without sodium bicarbonate; Catalog no. 31800-089, Lot no. 648072) was obtained from Invitrogen. Uridine 8 mg/ml in water (Catalog no. U3750, Lot no. 028KO760), glucose 40% (w/v) in water (Catalog no. G-5400), and MOPS Buffer (Catalog no. M-1254, Lot no. 098K0033) were obtained from Sigma.

RPMI medium (1X) was prepared by dissolving 10.4 g powdered medium in 800 ml water. A buffer of 34.52 g MOPS was added. While stirring, pH was adjusted to 7.0 with 10N NaOH. Next, 10 ml uridine solution and 50 ml glucose solution were added. The final volume was adjusted to 1000 ml, and filter sterilized.

Fungal Inoculum

The following yeast strains were used in this study: C. albicans CaCi-2. Fungal inoculum was prepared as follows: 500 μl of strain was inoculated from cryopreserved stock into a 250-ml shaker flask containing 30 ml growth medium and shaken overnight at 30 °C.

The optical density (OD 600) of 1 ml fungal culture in a cuvette was read using a standard optical density reader (Eppendorf BioPhotometer Plus), with growth medium as a background blank. The desired volume of fungal inoculums was diluted according to the formula specified in the protocol (see Appendix B).

Procedures

Fluconazole stock solution was added to the fungal inoculum to achieve 8 μg/ml. Pen/Strep was added to the media to a 1% concentration (v/v). A Thermo Combi nL was used to dispense 20 μl/well of assay media into all wells. Geldanamycin was dispensed in positive control wells using Thermo Combi nL for a final concentration of 3 μM. Then, 100 nl of test compound was pinned from compound plates into assay plates using a CyBi-Well pin tool. A further 20 μl/well of culture was dispensed into the assay media in all wells. The plates were incubated in a humidified (90 % humidity) Liconic incubator at 37 °C without agitation for 48 hours. Alamar Blue was diluted 1:40 in Ca/Mg-free PBS. To all plates, 5 μl/well of the diluted Alamar Blue was added for a final dilution factor of 1:200. The plates were incubated for an additional 2 hours. Then, Relative Fluorescence Intensity (RFU) of each well was read on standard plate reader as a measure of relative fungal growth. Envision (Perkin Elmer) plate reader set-up: Ex 544 nm, Em 590 nm, Bandwidth 12 nm, Top read.

2.1.2. Counterscreen Mammalian Cell Toxicity Assay (AID Nos. 2327, 488809, 493099, 493147)

Materials and Reagents

Clear, flat-bottom, black, 384-well plates were obtained from Corning (Catalog no. 3712BC, Lot no. 35808016). Geldanamycin (Catalog no. G-1047) was obtained from AG Scientific and prepared in 15 mM stock solution in DMSO (control). Fluconazole was obtained from Sequoia Research Products Ltd. and prepared in a 2 mg/ml stock solution in PBS. Alamar Blue was obtained from Biosource International (Catalog no. DAL1100, Lot no. 151016SA). Phosphate buffered saline (PBS; Catalog no. 21-040-CV) without calcium and magnesium was obtained from Cellgro.

Assay Medium

Optimem medium (Catalog no.31985-070, Lot no. 548536) and Pen/Strep 1% (v/v) solution (Catalog no. 15140-122, Lot no. 529891) were obtained from Invitrogen. Fetal bovine serum 2.5% (v/v) (FBS; Catalog no. 30071.03, Lot no. ARF26748) was obtained from Hyclone.

Cell Inoculum

The following test strain was used in this study: NIH-3T3 mammalian fibroblasts (ATCC; CRL no. 1658). Cell inoculum was prepared as follows: Cells were plated at 6,000 cells/well in 20 μl assay medium and cultured overnight at 37 °C under 5% CO2 in 384-well, clear bottom, black, tissue culture-treated, bar-coded assay plates.

Procedures

After overnight culture, compounds were pinned into wells at 100 nl/well using the CyBio CyBi-Well pinning instrument. After compounds were pinned, an additional 20 μl of assay medium supplemented with fluconazole (16 μg/ml) was added to each well. The final nominal concentration in the well was 50 μM of test compound and 8 μg/ml fluconazole. The plates were returned to the tissue culture incubator, and the culture continued for an additional 48 hours at 37 °C under 5% CO2. At the completion of this incubation, Alamar Blue Reagent diluted 1:40 in Ca/Mg-free PBS was added to each well (10 μl/well) to achieve a final dilution of 1:200. The plates were incubated for an additional 2 to 3 hours at 37 °C under 5% CO2, and then RFU as a measure of relative viable cell number was determined on an EnVision plate reading fluorometer. EnVision (Perkin Elmer) plate reader set-up: Ex 544 nm, Em 590 nm, Bandwidth 12 nm, Top read.

2.1.3. Secondary Single-Agent (No-Fluconazole) Activity Assay (AID No. 488802)

Materials and Reagents

Clear, flat-bottom, black, 384-well plates were obtained from Corning. Geldanamycin was obtained from AG Scientific G-1047 and prepared in 15 mM stock solution in DMSO. Pen/Strep was obtained from Gibco and prepared 100X in PBS. Fluconazole was obtained from Sigma and prepared in 2 mg/ml stock solution in PBS. Alamar Blue was obtained from Biosource International (Catalog no. DAL1100). Phosphate buffered solution (PBS) without calcium and magnesium was obtained from Cellgro.

Synthetic Defined Growth Medium

For the synthetic defined growth medium, RPMI 1640 medium (powder without sodium bicarbonate) was obtained from Invitrogen. Uridine (8 mg/ml in water), glucose 40% (w/v) in water, and MOPS buffer was obtained from Sigma.

RPMI medium (1X) was prepared by dissolving 10.4 g powdered medium in 800 ml water. A buffer of 34.52 g MOPS was added. While stirring, pH was adjusted to 7.0 with 10N NaOH. Next, 10 ml uridine solution and 50 ml glucose solution were added. The final volume was adjusted to 1000 ml, and the solution was filter sterilized.

Fungal Inoculum

The following yeast strain was used in this study: C. albicans CaCi-2 (10). Fungal inoculum was prepared as follows: 500 μl of yeast was inoculated from cryopreserved stock into a 250-ml shaker flask containing 30 ml growth medium and shaken overnight (16 hours) at 30 °C. The culture was spun down, and the broth was poured off and washed with RPMI medium. The culture was spun down again, and the broth was poured off and resuspended in RPMI medium. The OD 600 of 1 ml of fungal culture in a cuvette was read using a standard optical density reader with growth medium as a background blank. The desired volume of fungal inoculum was diluted to starting OD of the fungal inoculum of 0.00015 A600.

Procedures

Pen/Strep was added to the media to a final 1% concentration. A Combi NL (Thermo) was used to dispense 20 μl/well of assay media into all wells. Geldanamycin (1.5 mM) and fluconazole (0.2 mg/ml) were mixed for the positive control. Then, 80 nl of positive control solution was dispensed into the positive control wells using Thermo Combi nL for a final concentration of 3 μM geldanamycin and 8 μg/ml fluconazole. Then, 100 nl of test compound were pinned from the compound plates into assay plates using a CyBi-Well pin tool. A further 20 μl/well of RPMI synthetic defined medium culture was dispensed into 384-well, black plates. Fungal suspension (20 μl/well) was dispensed into all wells. The plates were incubated in a humidified (90% humidity) Liconic incubator at 37 °C without agitation for 48 hours. Alamar Blue Reagent was diluted 1:40 in Ca/Mg-free PBS. To all plates, 6.4 μl/well of the diluted Alamar Blue was added for a final dilution factor of 1:200. The plates were incubated for 2 hours at room temperature. Next, RFU of wells was read on a standard plate reader as a measure of relative fungal growth. Envision (Perkin Elmer) plate reader set-up: Ex 544 nm, Em 590 nm, Bandwidth 12 nm, Top read.

2.1.4. Hsp90 Binning Materials and Reagents

Corning white, 384-well plates were obtained from Corning (Catalog no. 8867BC; Lot no. 22609019). Tropix Gal-Screen was obtained from Applied Biosystems (Catalog no. T2359; Lot no. 0903044).

Assay Media
SD-ADE yeast nitrogen base w/o ammonium sulfate, minus adenine

SD Growth Media was obtained from MP Biomedical (Catalog no. 4027-012; Lot no. 119458). Complete Supplement minus adenine was obtained from Sunrise Science (Catalog no. 1029-100; Lot no. 070409). Deoxycorticosterone (DOC) steroid was obtained from Sigma.

To prepare the assay media, 100 ml (20% (w/v) dextrose and 780 mg Complete Supplement was added to 100 ml SD Growth Media. Water was added to a final volume of 1 liter, and the solution was filter sterilized.

DOC Media

For DOC media, 1 ml DOC was added to 100 ml SD-ADE media.

Cell Inoculum

The following test strain was used in this study: Saccharomyces cerevisiae W303 reporter strain (ATCC 201238). Cell Inoculum was prepared as follows: Reporter Saccharomyces strain was inoculated from cryopreserved stock into a 250 ml shaker flask containing 20 ml SD-ADE media. The reporter strain W303 was incubated overnight (16 hours) at 37 °C and 150 rpm.

Procedures

The OD 600 of 1 ml of culture in a cuvette was read using a standard optical density reader with growth medium as a background blank. Cells were diluted to OD = 0.04 in SD-ADE media. To each 384-well white plate, 20 μl of diluted culture was dispensed using a Combi NL (Thermo). Then, 100 nl of test compound were pinned into plates with a CyBi-Well pin tool. Next, 5 μM radicicol was added as positive control in the control wells, dispensing with a Combi NL (Thermo). With Combi, 20 μl of 20 μM DOC (steroid) in SD-ADE media was dispensed in pinned plates. The plates were incubated at 30 °C for 75 minutes with agitation. Using Combi, 40 μl Gal-Screen reagent was dispensed. The plates were incubated at 30 °C for 25 minutes. Luminescence of the wells was read on a standard plate reader as a measure of relative fungal growth. Envision (Perkin Elmer) plate reader set-up: Top read; Luminescence filter (560 nm) at 0.1 seconds.

2.2. Probe Chemical Characterization

After preparation as described in Section 2.3, the probe (ML212) was analyzed by UPLC, 1H and 13C NMR spectroscopy, and high-resolution mass spectrometry. The data obtained from NMR and mass spectroscopy were consistent with the structure of the probe, and UPLC indicated an isolated purity of greater than 93%. The relevant data is provided in Appendix C.

The solubility of the probe (ML212) was experimentally determined to be 3.6 μM in 2% (v/v) DMSO/PBS solution. The probe is exceptionally stable in PBS solution (>99% remaining after a 48-hour incubation). The data from the PBS stability assay is provided in Figure 4. Plasma protein binding (PPB) was determined to be 95% bound in human plasma. The probe is unstable in human plasma with approximately 3% remaining after a 5-hour incubation period. Presumably, hydrolysis of the methyl ester is the primary contributor to instability. The solubility, PPB, and plasma stability results are summarized in Section 3.4 (entry 8, Table 5).

Figure 4. Stability of the Probe (ML212) in PBS at 23 °C.

Figure 4

Stability of the Probe (ML212) in PBS at 23 °C.

The probe (ML212) and five additional analogs were submitted to the SMR collection MLS003271341 (probe), MLS003271339 (CID100493), MLS003271340 (CID49835836), MLS003271342 (CID49835857), MLS003271343 (CID3243873), and MLS003271344 (CID49835842).

2.3. Probe Preparation

The probe compound 11 (ML212) was prepared in a three-step sequence beginning with commercially available 3-iodo-1H-indazole (see Scheme 1). This material was first protected as its tert-butyl carbamate then coupled with 3-methoxyphenyl boronic acid. Conveniently, the thermal, alkaline conditions of the Suzuki coupling facilitated in situ decomposition of the Boc protecting group (11–13), and coupling product was isolated as only the free indazole. Subsequent alkylation with methyl bromoacetate completed the synthesis of the probe. Full experimental details are provided in this section.

Scheme 1. Synthesis of the Probe (ML212).

Scheme 1

Synthesis of the Probe (ML212).

General details. All reagents and solvents were purchased from commercial vendors and used as received. NMR spectra were recorded on a Bruker 300 MHz spectrometer. Proton and carbon chemical shifts are reported in ppm (δ) relative to tetramethylsilane (1H δ 0.00) or residual chloroform in CDCl3 solvent (1H δ 7.24, 13C δ 77.0). NMR data are reported as follows: chemical shifts, multiplicity (obs. = obscured, br = broad, s = singlet, d = doublet, t = triplet, m = multiplet); coupling constant(s) in Hz; integration.

Unless otherwise indicated, NMR data were collected at 25 °C. Flash chromatography was performed using 40–60 μm Silica Gel (60 Å mesh) on a Teledyne Isco Combiflash Rf system. Tandem Liquid Chromatography/Mass Spectrometry (LC/MS) was performed on a Waters 2795 separations module and 3100 mass detector. Analytical thin layer chromatography (TLC) was performed on EM Reagent 0.25 mm silica gel 60-F plates. Visualization was accomplished with UV light and aqueous potassium permanganate (KMnO4) stain followed by heating. Microwave reactions were performed with a Biotage Initiator 2.5 Microwave Synthesizer. High-resolution mass spectra were obtained at the MIT Mass Spectrometry Facility with a Bruker Daltonics APEXIV 4.7 Tesla Fourier Transform Ion Cyclotron Resonance mass spectrometer. Compound purity and identity were determined by UPLC-MS (Waters, Milford, MA). Purity was measured by UV absorbance at 210 nm. Identity was determined on an SQ mass spectrometer by positive electrospray ionization. Mobile Phase A consisted of either 0.1% ammonium hydroxide or 0.1% trifluoroacetic acid in water, while mobile Phase B consisted of the same additives in acetonitrile. The gradient ran from 5% to 95% mobile Phase B over 48 seconds at 0.45 ml/min. An Acquity BEH C18, 1.7 μm, 1.0 × 50 mm column was used with column temperature maintained at 65 °C. Compounds were dissolved in DMSO at a nominal concentration of 1 mg/ml, and 0.25 μl of this solution was injected.

Image ml212fu2

Step 1. Preparation of tert-butyl 3-iodo-1H-indazole-1-carboxylate (7): 3-Iodo-1H-indazole (5.00 g, 19.5 mmol) was placed in a round-bottom flask and dissolved in tetrahydrofuran (100 ml). 4-Dimethylaminopyridine (0.24 g, 1.9 mmol, 0.1 equiv) was then added, followed by di-tert-butyl dicarbonate (5.4 ml, 24 mmol, 1.2 equiv). Triethylamine (5.4 ml, 39 mmol, 2.0 equiv) was slowly added to the clear brown solution by syringe. The resulting solution was stirred at room temperature and monitored by TLC until complete. The reaction required approximately 2 hours. Once complete, the reaction was diluted with water (75 ml) and ethyl acetate (50 ml). After separating the layers, the aqueous phase was extracted with additional ethyl acetate (3 × 50 ml). The combined organic layers were washed with brine (100 ml), then shaken over magnesium sulfate, filtered, and concentrated under reduced pressure to give a dark red oil (8.40 g). The crude material was purified by column chromatography over silica gel (hexanes/ethyl acetate: 100/0 to 90/10) to give the title compound as an orange solid (6.20 g, 93%).

1H NMR (300 MHz, CDCl3): δ 8.12 (d, J = 8.4 Hz, 1H), 7.59 (t, J = 7.7 Hz, 1H), 7.50 (d, J = 7.9 Hz, 1H), 7.37 (t, J = 7.5 Hz, 1H), 1.73 (s, 9H); 13C NMR (75 MHz, CDCl3): δ 148.3, 139.6, 130.2, 129.9, 124.1, 121.9, 114.5, 102.8, 85.4, 28.1; ESI-MS (M-C4H9): m/z 288.

Image ml212fu3

Step 2. Preparation of (3-(3-methoxyphenyl)-1H-indazole (9): tert-butyl 3-iodo-1H-indazole-1-carboxylate (100 mg, 0.29 mmol) was placed in a suitably sized microwave vial and dissolved in 1,4-dioxane (11.5 ml). 3-Methoxyphenyl boronic acid (88 mg, 0.58 mmol, 2.0 equiv) and tetrakis(triphenylphosphine) palladium (20 mg, 0.017 mmol, 0.06 equiv) were added, and the resulting turbid orange mixture was sparged thoroughly with nitrogen. An aqueous solution of sodium carbonate (2.0 M, 0.65 ml, 1.31 mmol, 4.5 equiv) was then added. The biphasic mixture was microwaved for 1 hour at a reaction temperature of 120 °C. The reaction was diluted with ethyl acetate (2 ml), and then filtered through a celite pad with additional ethyl acetate. The filtrate was concentrated under reduced pressure to give an oil. The crude material was purified by column chromatography over silica gel (hexanes/ethyl acetate: 100/0 to 30/70) to give the title compound as an orange oil (58.0 mg, 89%).

1H NMR (300 MHz, CDCl3): δ 12.71 (s, 1H), 8.00 (d, J = 8.2 Hz, 1H), 7.69 – 7.53 (m, 2H), 7.44 (t, J = 7.9 Hz, 1H), 7.31 – 7.22 (m, 1H), 7.17 (dd, J = 4.9, 13.0 Hz, 1H), 7.05 (d, J = 8.3 Hz, 1H), 7.03 – 6.98 (m, 1H), 3.79 (s, 3H); 13C NMR (75 MHz, CDCl3): δ 160.1, 145.4, 141.7, 134.8, 130.0, 126.7, 121.3, 120.9, 120.8, 120.3, 114.2, 113.0, 110.5, 55.3; ESI-MS: m/z 224

Image ml212fu4

Step 3. Preparation of methyl 2-(3-(3-methoxyphenyl)-1H-indazol-1-yl)acetate (11): 3-(3-methoxyphenyl)-1H-indazole (163 mg, 0.73 mmol) was dissolved in acetone (2.2 ml) and treated with methyl bromoacetate (0.21 ml, 2.2 mmol, 3.0 equiv). Finely powdered potassium carbonate (721 mg, 2.2 mmol, 3.0 equiv) was added in a single portion, and the resulting suspension was stirred overnight at 60 °C. Upon completion, the reaction was cooled to room temperature and filtered through celite with acetone. The clear orange filtrate was concentrated under reduced pressure to give the crude product as a dark orange oil. This material was purified by column chromatography over silica gel (hexanes/ethyl acetate: 100/0 to 70/30) to give the probe compound as an orange oil (186 mg, 86%).

1H NMR (300 MHz, CDCl3): δ 8.03 (d, J = 8.2 Hz, 1H), 7.53 (obs. t, J = 6.0 Hz, 1H), 7.50 (obs. s, 1H), 7.42 (obs. q, J = 7.7 Hz, 2H), 7.36 (obs. t, J = 8.1 Hz, 1H), 7.24 (t, J = 7.5 Hz, 1H), 6.96 (dd, J = 2.5, 8.2 Hz, 1H), 5.22 (s, 2H), 3.89 (s, 3H), 3.75 (s, 3H). 13C NMR (75 MHz, CDCl3): δ 168.4, 160.0, 145.1, 141.7, 134.6, 129.8, 126.9, 122.2, 121.6, 121.5, 120.1, 114.2, 112.8, 109.0, 55.4, 52.6, 50.3. HRMS (ESI): calculated mass for C17H16N2O3 [M+H] 297.1234, found 297.1246.

2.4. Additional Analytical Analysis

Plasma Protein Binding. Plasma protein binding was determined by equilibrium dialysis using the Rapid Equilibrium Dialysis (RED) device (Pierce Biotechnology, Rockford, IL) for both human and mouse plasma. Each compound was prepared in duplicate at 5 μM in plasma (0.95% acetonitrile, 0.05% DMSO) and added to one side of the membrane (200 μl) with PBS pH 7.4 added to the other side (350 μL). Compounds were incubated at 37 °C for 5 hours in a 250-rpm orbital shaker. Following the incubation, the samples were analyzed by UPLC-MS (Waters, Milford, MA) with compounds detected by SIR detection on a single quadrupole mass spectrometer.

Plasma Stability. Plasma stability was determined at 37 °C for 5 hours in both human and mouse plasma. Each compound was prepared in duplicate at 5 μM in plasma diluted 50/50 (v/v) with PBS pH 7.4 (0.95% acetonitrile, 0.05% DMSO). The compounds were incubated at 37 °C for 5 hours with a 250-rpm orbital shaker with time points taken at 0 hours and 5 hours. The samples were analyzed by UPLC-MS (Waters, Milford, MA) with compounds detected by SIR detection on a single quadrupole mass spectrometer.

3. Results

Probe attributes

  • Compounds that inhibit yeast growth in the presence, but not in the absence of 8 μg/ml fluconazole.
  • Compounds that show at least 10-fold selectivity between the primary Candida test strain and mammalian cells.
  • Compounds that show activity toward resistant clinical isolates at an IC50 < 50 μM.
  • IC50 ≤1 μM in primary or resistant screen cell line.

3.1. Summary of Screening Results

Figure 6 displays the critical path for probe development.

Figure 6. Critical Path for Probe Development.

Figure 6

Critical Path for Probe Development.

A high-throughput screen of 302,509 compounds (PubChem AID 1979) was performed in duplicate in the fluconazole-resistant C. albicans strain CaCi-2 in the presence of a sublethal concentration of fluconazole. Using a screening active cutoff of ≥75% inhibition at a screening concentration of 9.5 μM, 1893 hits were identified as Candida CaCi-2 growth inhibitors in the presence of fluconazole, and 1654 were available as cherry picks. These picked compounds were retested in dose against the C. albicans strain CaCi-2 to confirm their inhibitory activity and determine an IC50 value. Of these, there were 622 compounds that met the criterion of inhibitory activity of less than or equal to 1 μM.

An orthogonal screen of these 1654 cherry picks against a more resistant C. albicans strain, CaCi-8 in the presence of a sub-lethal concentration of fluconazole (AID 2423), selected for compounds that were active with an IC50 value less than 50 μM. There were 836 compounds that met this criterion, and 403 of these compounds were among the 622 actives from the CaCi-2 retest.

Murine 3T3 fibroblasts provided an assay for overt compound toxicity to mammalian cells. Of the 1654 cherry picks, 1012 compounds were inactive in this assay, indicating fungal selectivity, of which 350 also met the criteria in the prior CaCi-2 and CaCi-8 assays.

To eliminate cherry pick compounds that intrinsically inhibit Candida growth, an additional secondary screen of the 1654 cherry picks in the absence of fluconazole was included, with a 10 μM IC50 cutoff. Of the 350 compounds of interest, 296 compounds met this criterion.

Figure 5. Bar Chart of the Antifungal Screening Campaign.

Figure 5Bar Chart of the Antifungal Screening Campaign

Two ancillary secondary assays were run to bin the remaining 296 compounds into three classes: Hsp90 inhibitors, calcineurin inhibitors, or other. Inhibition of either Hsp90 or calcineurin has been shown to restore fluconazole sensitivity in Saccharomyces cerevisiae as well as Candida albicans, but the specific mechanism(s) by which resistance is lost remains unknown. Identification of fungal-selective Hsp90 or calcineurin inhibitors would enable more detailed investigation into how Hsp90 engenders antifungal drug resistance in fungi.

The Hsp90 assay used a Saccharomyces cerevisiae strain engineered to express beta-galactosidase driven by glucocorticoid response element. The glucocorticoid hormone receptor depends heavily on Hsp90 for function. Of the 296 compounds of interest, 17 compounds were active as defined by a 10 μM upper threshold of inhibition.

The second binning assay for calcineurin inhibition was evaluated in a yeast carrying a construct encoding calcineurin-dependent response elements (CDRE) driving expression of beta-galactosidase. Reporter activity with or without the prior addition of test compounds was measured following challenge with the stressor calcium chloride (CaCl2). Of the 296 compounds of interest, two compounds were active as defined by a 10 μM upper threshold of inhibition. The remaining 277 compounds functioned via alternative pathways and were categorized as “Other/Unknown mechanism.”

Thirty (30) compounds were chosen for initial dry powder confirmation studies from the 296 identified above by first clustering into small groups of related analogs, and then picking representative analogs from each of those families. After re-testing these dry powders in the test cascade, three compounds were chosen as potential probe candidates, and a first round of 31 analogs (plus three probe candidates) were obtained and assayed. Using the results from these assays as guidance, a second round of analogs (plus the probe candidate) was prepared for SAR analysis.

3.2. Dose Response Curves for Probe

Figure 7. Dose-dependent Activity of the Probe (ML212) Against Various Cell Lines.

Figure 7Dose-dependent Activity of the Probe (ML212) Against Various Cell Lines

C.albicans CaCi-2 in the presence of fluconazole (IC50 = 440 nM, AID 493080) (A); C.albicans CaCi-8 in the presence of fluconazole (IC50 = 1210 nM, AID 493149) (B); Murine 3T3 fibroblasts in the absence of fluconazole (inactive, AID 493147) (C); C.albicans CaCi-2 in the absence of fluconazole (inactive, AID 493070) (D); S. cerevisiae with Hsp90 construct (IC50 = 4.18 μM, AID 493134) (E).

3.3. Scaffold/Moiety Chemical Liabilities

A search of PubChem for the probe (ML212) indicated that the probe has not been previously evaluated in any other assay. A structure-based search in SciFinder and Reaxys did not identify any publications or patents in which the probe appeared. The only potential chemical liability associated with the probe is possible hydrolysis of the methyl ester.

3.4. SAR Tables

In order to investigate the activity of this structural class, a collection of 58 structurally related analogs were synthesized and evaluated for their ability to reverse fluconazole resistance in the C.albicans test strains. Figure 8 depicts the diversification points selected for modification. Three diversity points (highlighted in purple, blue, and green) were explored, and the number of analogs screened for each site is specified. Several analogs did not fit into these three clusters and are classified as “miscellaneous” analogs.

Figure 8. Summary of analogs prepared to investigate the SAR profile of the HTS hit.

Figure 8

Summary of analogs prepared to investigate the SAR profile of the HTS hit. Key SAR findings for each site of diversification are provided in italics.

The biological assay data and physical properties of these analogs are presented in Tables 16. Characterization data (1H NMR spectra and UPLC chromatograms) of these analogs are provided in Appendix C.

Table 1. Evaluation of 12 Synthetic Ester and Amide Analogs.

Table 1

Evaluation of 12 Synthetic Ester and Amide Analogs.

Table 2. Synthetic Replacements of the Methyl Acetate Side Chain (10 analogs).

Table 2

Synthetic Replacements of the Methyl Acetate Side Chain (10 analogs).

Table 3. Biological and Physical Properties of Substituted Indazoles (10 analogs).

Table 3

Biological and Physical Properties of Substituted Indazoles (10 analogs).

Table 4. Alkyl Replacements of the 3-phenyl Ring (3 analogs).

Table 4

Alkyl Replacements of the 3-phenyl Ring (3 analogs).

Table 5. Effect of Substitution on the 3-phenyl Ring System (12 analogs).

Table 5

Effect of Substitution on the 3-phenyl Ring System (12 analogs).

Table 6. Miscellaneous Analogs of the 3-phenyl-1H-indazole Scaffold (11 analogs).

Table 6

Miscellaneous Analogs of the 3-phenyl-1H-indazole Scaffold (11 analogs).

The initial hit from the HTS campaign described in Section 3.1 was methyl 3-phenyl-1H-indazole acetate (entry 1, Table 1). The side chain methyl ester of the hit was predicted to be susceptible to hydrolysis, and a series of ester and amide analogs were prepared accordingly to evaluate the necessity of this latent acid (Table 1). From this screen, it was determined that replacement of the methyl ester with metabolically more stable derivatives was detrimental to cellular activity. The inactivity of these compounds suggested that perhaps the free acid was the active species. Unfortunately, when this predicted metabolite was prepared and tested, it also proved ineffective at countering fluconazole resistance in C.albicans (entry 12, Table 1).

Following the investigation of alternative esters and amides, efforts were undertaken to substantially modify the entire side chain. To this end, 10 analogs were prepared and tested (Table 2). The absence of the methyl acetate was not tolerated (entry 1, Table 2), and excision of any oxygen atoms from the ester system (entries 2–4, Table 2) was also not tolerated. Extension of the side chain length was similarly ineffective (entries 5 and 6, Table 2). Several compounds incorporating substitutions adjacent to the ester were also prepared (entries 7–9, Table 2). However, only the mono-methyl derivative (entry 7, Table 2) retained any activity in the cellular assay; but, this analog was less potent than the original hit. While the γ-lactone (entry 9, Table 2) was clean by NMR spectroscopy, UPLC indicated hydrolysis to the seco-acid readily occurs; this phenomenon may have contributed to the inactivity of this compound.

Finally, an oxazole conjugate was investigated as a possible ester surrogate. Although this derivative displayed very weak activity against CaCi-8, there was no measurable efficacy towards the less resistant CaCi-2 (entry 10, Table 2). Based on the results summarized in Table 1 and Table 2, it appears that the methyl acetate system is critical to activity and further perturbation of this functionality is discouraged.

Table 3 presents several derivatives of the initial hit wherein the indazole core was modified to incorporate additional functional groups. This series of analogs focused predominantly on the 5- and 6-positions of the aromatic system. With regards to the 5-position (i.e. R1), only the methyl or fluoro derivatives displayed low micromolar potency against CaCi-2 (entries 1 and 3, Table 3). Conversely, no activity was recorded for the methoxy or chloro counterparts (entries 2 and 4, Table 3). R2, or the 6-position, appeared more amenable to manipulation as four of five conjugates demonstrated mild inhibitory effects towards CaCi-2 (entries 5–9, Table 3); only the 6-trifluoromethyl variant was inactive (entry 9, Table 3). It is notable that all of the 5- and 6-substituted variants were slightly active against the more resistant CaCi-8 strain (IC50 values 5.3 μM to 32.1 μM). SAR of the indazole core suggests the 6-position is an attractive site for future exploration, in particular for further optimization of aqueous solubility.

The last point of diversity explored was the 3-phenyl ring of the parent indazole scaffold. Fifteen analogs were synthesized to probe the SAR of this region, and the results are summarized in Table 4 and Table 5. Table 4 presents several nonaromatic analogs that were prepared to replace the benzene ring. Removal of the phenyl ring adversely affected potency; both the unsubstituted 1H-indazole and 3-methyl compounds were inactive in the primary assay (entries 1 and 3, Table 4). The 3-iodo derivative was likewise an ineffective chemosensitizing agent (entry 2, Table 4). Incidentally, this series of analogs boasted high PBS solubility, but sacrificed all cellular potency.

To complement the previous nonaromatic series, a collection of monosubstituted phenyl conjugates was prepared (Table 5). Substitution at the para-position was generally not productive (entries 1–6, Table 5); only the methoxy and fluoro compounds displayed measurable activity in the primary screen (entries 2 and 3, Table 5). This trend stands in stark contrast to modification of the meta site. All three indazoles bearing a meta-substituted phenyl ring were very potent chemosensitizers (entries 7–9, Table 5). Both the 3-(3-tolyl) and 3-(3-anisolyl)-1H- indazoles demonstrated nanomolar potency against CaCi-2 (IC50= 650 nM and 440 nM, respectively) and low micromolar activity against CaCi-8 (IC50 = 1.3 μM and 1.2 μM, respectively). The 3-fluoro counterpart was marginally less effective (IC50 = 1.4 μM against CaCi-2 and 2.1 μM against CaCi-8). The meta-position was clearly the pivotal site for potency; the two ortho-substituted analogs were considerably less potent than the meta-series although there were small gains in solubility (entries 10–11, Table 5).

SAR evaluation of the original scaffold was concluded with a series of compounds encompassing larger structural perturbations (Table 6). For several analogs, the aromatic and acetate side chains were relocated to alternative sites around the indazole system (entries 1–6, Table 6). Not surprisingly, these drastic alterations failed to yield any beneficial increase to cellular potency. Entries 7 and 8 (Table 6) re-affirmed SAR trends previously observed – neither the 5- chloro indazole nor acetamide analogs were efficacious chemosensitizers (cf. Table 3 and Table 1, respectively), and their corresponding hybrids were just as impotent. Various fragmented indazole systems did not exhibit any bioactivity when evaluated (entries 9–11, Table 6).

It can be concluded from these SAR studies that the methyl acetate side chain is invaluable to cellular bioactivity. Similarly, replacement of the 3-phenyl ring system with nonaromatic functionalities strongly attenuated potency. However, it was identified that meta-substituted phenyl rings were equipotent to or more potent than the original HTS hit. Modification of the para- or ortho-positions was generally counterproductive. The indazole core itself could tolerate functionalization at the 5-position to a limited degree while the adjacent 6-position could accommodate substituents with only a small loss in activity. Most of the compounds evaluated exhibited poor solubility in PBS (<1 μM); the few compounds that were soluble were often completely inactive.

As a result of these synthetic efforts, it was possible to increase the potency of the original hit (CID 3243873) from 1.8 μM to 0.44 μM and led to the identification of 3-(3-methoxyphenyl)-1H-indazole as a new probe compound (ML212).

3.5. Cellular Activity

All assays were performed with whole cells. A murine 3T3 fibroblast mammalian cell toxicity assay was included as a secondary screen. Experimental details are provided above in Section 2.1.2. The probe (ML212) clearly met the established probe criteria specified for this project (Table 7).

Table 7. Comparison of Probe to Project Criteria.

Table 7

Comparison of Probe to Project Criteria.

3.6. Profiling Assays

The probe (ML212) was evaluated for inhibitory activity against calcinuerin and Hsp90. Both proteins have been linked to the acquisition and maintenance of antifungal drug resistance in C. albicans. Assay results indicated the probe was a mild inhibitor of the Hsp90 pathway (IC50 = 4.18 μM). Additional details are provided below in Section 4.2.

4. Discussion

4.1. Comparison to existing art and how the new probe is an improvement

Investigation into relevant prior art entailed searching the following databases: SciFinder, Reaxys, PubChem, PubMed, US Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO), PatFT, AppFT, and World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO). The search terms applied and hit statistics are provided in Table 8. The searches were performed on and are current as of February 7, 2011.

Table 8. Search Strings and Databases Employed in the Prior Art Search.

Table 8

Search Strings and Databases Employed in the Prior Art Search.

Several compounds have been previously identified as chemosensitizers, increasing the susceptibility of various C.albicans strains to fluconazole treatment (2–7). Of these, the most potent belonged to a series of HDAC inhibitors reported by Mai et al. (7). Depicted in Figure 9, these compounds are uracil-derived hydroxamic acids and exhibited MIC values ranging from 1.2 μM to 2.8 μM when combined with fluconazole. When tested in the absence of fluconazole, neither compound demonstrated activity against C.albicans at concentrations up to 368 μM. However, the potent activity of these compounds against murine HDAC1 (IC50 <51 nM), combined with the antiproliferative activity of similar analogs in human cells (8,9), indicates they would not possess any significant species selectivity. The absence of selectivity disqualified compounds 4 and 5 as probe candidates. In addition, neither compound could be readily obtained for direct comparison to ML212.

Figure 9. Chemosensitizers for Reversing Fluconazole Resistance (MIC=1.2–2.8 μM).

Figure 9

Chemosensitizers for Reversing Fluconazole Resistance (MIC=1.2–2.8 μM).

The probe (ML212) has a potency of 440 nM against the C.albicans strain CaCi-2, and does not exhibit any effect in the absence of fluconazole or against mammalian fibroblasts.

4.2. Mechanism of Action Studies

Previous studies have demonstrated that functional Hsp90 and calcineurin are critical to drug resistance. In order to determine if ML212 affects the Hsp90 pathway or calcineurin itself, secondary assays were established.

Potential inhibition of the Hsp90-based chaperone machinery was evaluated using yeast reporter assays involving the glucocorticoid hormone receptor and the tyrosine kinase, v-Src. Both of these well established client proteins depend heavily on Hsp90 for their function. Refer to Section 2.1.4 for method details.

Potential inhibition of calcineurin function was evaluated in yeast carrying a construct encoding calcineurin-dependent response elements (CDRE) driving expression of a reporter enzyme. Reporter activity with or without the prior addition of test compounds was measured following challenge with the stressor CaCl2.

The probe (ML212) exhibited Hsp90 pathway inhibition with IC50 = 4.18 μM in the S. cerevisiae model. The inactivity of the compound in the mammalian fibroblast assay (IC50 > 26 μM) suggests that ML212 may be a fungal-selective inhibitor of the Hsp90 pathway. Further investigations will evaluate this possibility and determine if this is the mode of action in C.albicans.

4.3. Planned Future Studies

The goal of probe optimization is to generate potent, fungal-specific agents for future mechanistic studies and target identification projects. The Lindquist lab is currently performing C.albicans resistance studies with ML212, and preliminary results suggest that generation of a ML212-resistant strain is possible. Successful induction of resistance would enable further investigation of ML212’s cellular target through the use of powerful genetic approaches that are available, including genome-wide, over expression, and deletion libraries, both in parallel arrayed format and pooled bar-coded format. To complement genetic approaches, affinity precipitation and proteomic approaches based on Stable Isotope Labeling with Amino acids in Cell culture (SILAC) technology, which are already being employed in other projects, may be used. The drug metabolism/pharmacokinetic (DMPK) properties of the probe can be further optimized, and the probe (ML212) could be studied in well-established mouse models of invasive, drug-resistant Candida fungemia, which are available and have been employed in the Whitehead Institute in conjunction with the laboratory of Gerald Fink. There is currently an IACUC-approved protocol in place to enable such experimentation in future work and to evaluate the therapeutic potential of probes generated by this screen.

5. References

1.
Cowen LE, Lindquist S. Hsp90 potentiates the rapid evolution of new traits: drug resistance in diverse fungi. Science. 2005 Sep 30;309(5744):2185–89. [PubMed: 16195452]
2.
DiGirolamo JA, Li X.-C, Jacob MR, Clark AM, Ferreira D. Reversal of fluconazole resistance by sulfated sterols from the marine sponge Topsentia sp. J Nat Prod. 2009 Aug;72(8):1524–28. [PMC free article: PMC3697152] [PubMed: 19653640]
3.
Cernicka J, Kozovska Z, Hnatova M, Valachovic M, Hapala I, Riedl Z, Hajós G, Subik J. Chemosensitisation of drug-resistant and drug-sensitive yeast cells to antifungals. Int J Antimicrobial Agents. 2007 Feb;29(2):170–8. Epub 2007 Jan 3. [PubMed: 17204400] [CrossRef]
4.
Gamarra S, Rocha EM, Zhang Y.-Q, Park S, Rao R, Perlin DS. Mechanism of the synergistic effect of amiodarone and fluconazole in Candida albicans. Antimicrob Agents Chemother. 2010 May;54(5):1753–61. Epub 2010 Mar 1. [PMC free article: PMC2863688] [PubMed: 20194694]
5.
Guo X.-L, Leng P, Yang Y, Yu L.-G, Lou H-X. Plagiochin E, a botanic-derived phenolic compound, reverses fungal resistance to fluconazole relating to the efflux pump. J Appl Microbio. 2008 Mar;104(3):831–38. Epub 2008 Jan 9. [PubMed: 18194250] [CrossRef]
6.
Courchesne WE. Characterization of a novel, broad-based fungicidal activity for the antiarrhythmic drug amiodarone. J Pharmacol Exp Ther. 2002 Jan 1;300:195–99. [PubMed: 11752116] [CrossRef]
7.
Mai A, Rotili D, Massa S, Brosch G, Simonetti G, Passariello C, Palamara AT. Discovery of uracil-based histone deacetylase inhibitors able to reduce acquired antifungal resistance and trailing growth in Candida albicans. Bioorg Med Chem Lett. 2007 Mar 1;17(5):1221–25. Epub 2006 Dec 12. [PubMed: 17196388]
8.
Mai A, Massa S, Rotili D, Pezzi R, Bottoni P, Scatena R, Meraner J, Brosch G. Exploring the connection unit in the HDAC inhibitor pharmacophore model: Novel uracil-based hydroxamates. Bioorg Med Chem Lett. (15) 2005 Nov 1;(21):4656–61. [PubMed: 16165353]
9.
Mai A, Massa S, Rotili D, Simeoni S, Ragno R, Botta G, Nebbioso A, Miceli M, Altucci L, Brosch G. Synthesis and biological properties of novel, uracil-containing histone deacetylase inhibitors. J Med Chem. 2006 Oct 5;49(20):6046–56. [PubMed: 17004718]
10.
Redding S, Smith J, Farinacci G, Rinaldi M, Fothergill A, Rhine-Chalberg J, Pfaller M. Resistance of Candida albicans to fluconazole during treatment of oropharyngeal candidiasis in a patient with AIDS: documentation by in vitro susceptibility testing and DNA subtype analysis. Clin Infect Dis. 1994 Feb 1;18(2):240–42. [PubMed: 8161633]
11.
Salovich JM, Lindsley CW, Hopkins CR. Synthesis of 2,3-diarylsubstituted indazoles utilizing a Suzuki cross-coupling/deprotection/N-arylation sequence. Tetrahedron Lett. 2010 Jul 21;51(29):3796–3799. [PMC free article: PMC2893583] [PubMed: 20606711]
12.
Bouissane L, El Kazzouli S, Léonce S, Pfeiffer B, Rakib EM, Khouili M, Guillaumet G. Synthesis and biological evaluation of N-(7-indazolyl)benzenesulfonamide derivatives as potent cell cycle inhibitors. Bioorg Med Chem. 2006 Feb 15;14(4):1078–88. [PubMed: 16274996]
13.
Baldwin IR, Bamborough P, Christopher JA, Kerns JK, Longstaff T, Mill DD. Indole derivatives and use thereof as kinase inhibitors in particular IKK2 inhibitors. WO 2005/067923 A1. Int. Pat. Appl. 2005

Appendix A. Assay Summary Table

Table A1Summary of Completed Assays and AIDs

PubChem AIDTypeTargetConcentration Range (μM)Samples Tested
1979PrimaryCaCi-2 growth inhibition9.5302509
2467ConfirmatoryCaCi-2 growth inhibition3.8 – 0.031654
488836Confirmatory (powder)CaCi-2 growth inhibition26 – 0.130
493089AnalogsCaCi-2 growth inhibition12 – 0.0554
493081Analogs 2CaCi-2 growth inhibition12 – 0.0529
493080Analogs 3CaCi-2 growth inhibition12 – 0.05128
493150Analogs 4CaCi-2 growth inhibition12 – 0.0533
2327CounterscreenFibroblast toxicity16 – 0.121654
488809Counterscreen (powder)Fibroblast toxicity26 – 0.144
493099Counterscreen (analogs)Fibroblast toxicity26 – 0.164
493147Counterscreen (analogs 2)Fibroblast toxicity6 – 0.05108
2423OrthogonalCaCi-8 growth inhibition16 – 0.121654
488807Orthogonal (powder)CaCi-8 growth inhibition26 – 0.144
493064Orthogonal (analogs)CaCi-8 growth inhibition26 – 0.164
493069Orthogonal (analogs 2)CaCi-8 growth inhibition26 – 0.127
493082Orthogonal (analogs 3)CaCi-8 growth inhibition26 – 0.129
493149Orthogonal (analogs 3)CaCi-8 growth inhibition26 – 0.133
2387SecondaryCaCi-2 growth inhibition16 – 0.12350
488802Secondary (powder)CaCi-2 growth inhibition26 – 0.130
493070Secondary (analogs2)CaCi-2 growth inhibition26 – 0.127
493157Secondary (analogs3)CaCi-2 growth inhibition26 – 0.129
493134Secondary (analogs3)CaCi-2 growth inhibition26 – 0.133
2400SecondaryHsp9016 – 0.12350
504390Secondary (analogs)Hsp9026 – 0.118
2388SecondaryCalcineurin16 – 0.12350
2007SummaryNANANA

Appendix B. Detailed Assay Protocol

Primary CaCi-2 (AID No. 1979) and CaCi-2 Dose-Response Retest (AID Nos. 2467, 488836)

Materials and Reagents

Clear, flat bottom, black, 384-well plates (Corning Catalog no. 3712BC Lot no. 35808016); Geldanamycin (AG Scientific, catalog no. G-1047) 15 mM stock solution in DMSO; Fluconazole (Sequoia Research Products Ltd) 2 mg/ml stock solution in PBS; Pen/Strep (Gibco Catalog no.10378-016; Lot no. 21040170) 100X in PBS; Alamar Blue (AG Scientific Catalog no.DAL 1100; Lot no.151016SA); PBS without Calcium and Magnesium (Cellgro Catalog no. 21-040-CV)

Synthetic Defined Growth Medium

RPMI 1640 medium, (powder without sodium bicarbonate; Invitrogen Catalog no. 31800-089; Lot no. 648072); Uridine 8 mg/ml in water (Sigma Catalog no. U3750, Lot no. 028KO760); Glucose 40% (w/v) in water (Sigma Catalog no. G-5400); MOPS Buffer (Sigma Catalog no. M-1254; Lot no. 098K0033)

  1. Prepare 1X RPMI medium by dissolving 10.4 grams powdered medium in 800 ml water.
  2. Add 34.52 g MOPS. While stirring, adjust pH to 7.0 with 10 N NaOH.
  3. Add 10 ml uridine solution, 50 ml glucose solution, adjust final volume to 1000 ml. Filter sterilize.
Fungal Inoculum

Test Strain: C. albicans CaCi-2

  1. Inoculate 500 μlL of strain from cryopreserved stock into 250 ml shaker flask containing 30 ml growth medium. Shake at 30 °C overnight.
  2. Read OD 600 of 1 ml fungal culture in a cuvette using a standard optical density reader (Eppendorf BioPhotometer Plus), with growth medium as a background blank.
  3. Dilute to desired volume of fungal inoculums according to the following formula: (1/OD measured) X (Desired Final Volume of Inoculum) X 0.3 = Volume of fungal culture (μl) to add to desired volume of growth medium. When added to media in wells, this yields a calculated starting OD of the fungal inoculum of 0.00015.

Procedures

  1. Add fluconazole stock solution to fungal inoculum to achieve a final concentration of 8 μg/ml.
  2. Add Pen/Strep at 0.1 ml per 10 ml media (1% v/v).
  3. Use a Thermo Combi nL to dispense 20 μl/well of assay media into all wells.
  4. Pin 25 nL test compound from compound plates into assay plates using CyBi-Well pin tool.
  5. Dispense 20 μl/well of culture into the assay media in all wells.
  6. Incubate plates in a humidified (90% humidity) Liconic incubator at 37 °C without agitation for 48 hours.
  7. Dilute Alamar Blue Reagent 1:40 in Ca/Mg-free PBS.
  8. To all plates, add 5 μl/well of the diluted Alamar to a final dilution factor of 1:200.
  9. Incubate the plates for an additional 2 hours.
  10. Read the Relative Fluorescence Intensity (RFU) of wells on a standard plate reader as a measure of relative fungal growth. Envision (Perkin Elmer) plate reader set-up: Ex 544 nm, Em 590 nm, Bandwidth 12 nm, Top read.

Orthogonal Resistant Strain Dose Response (AID Nos. 2423, 488807, 493064, 493069, 493082, 493149)

Materials and Reagents

Clear, flat bottom, black 384-well plates (Corning Catalog no. 3712BC; Lot no. 35808016); Geldanamycin (AG Scientific Catalog no. G-1047) 15 mM stock solution in DMSO; Pen/Strep (Gibco Catalog no.10378-016;Lot no.21040170) 100X in PBS; Fluconazole (Sigma Catalog no.F829-100MG;Lot no. 098K4715) 2 mg/ml stock solution in PBS; Alamar Blue (AG Scientific Catalog no. DAL1100; Lot no.151016SA);PBS w/o Calcium and Magnesium (Cellgro Catalog no. 21-040-CV)

Synthetic Defined Growth Medium

RPMI 1640 medium, (powder without sodium bicarbonate; Invitrogen Catalog no. 31800-089, Lot no.648072); Uridine 8 mg/ml in water (Sigma Catalog no. U3750; Lot no. 028K0760); Glucose 40% (w/v) in water (Sigma Catalog no. G-5400); MOPS Buffer (Sigma Catalog no. M-1254; Lot no. 098K0033)

  1. Prepare 1X RPMI medium by dissolving 10.4 g powdered medium in 800 ml water.
  2. Add 34.52 g MOPS. While stirring, adjust pH to 7.0 with 10N NaOH.
  3. Add 10 ml uridine solution, 50 ml glucose solution, adjust final volume to 1000 ml. Filter sterilize
Fungal Inoculum

Test Strain: C. albicans CaCi8 (10)

  1. Inoculate 500 μl of strain from cryopreserved stock into 250 ml shaker flask containing 30 ml growth medium. Shake at 30 °C overnight (16 hours).
  2. Read OD 600 of 1 ml of fungal culture in a cuvette using a standard optical density reader (Eppendorf BioPhotometer Plus), with growth medium as a background blank.
  3. Dilute to a desired volume of fungal inoculum according to following formula: (1/OD measured) X (Desired Final Volume of Inoculum) X 0.3 = Volume of fungal culture (μl) to add to desired volume of growth medium. When added to media in wells, this yields a calculated starting OD of the fungal inoculum of 0.00015.

Procedures

  1. Add fluconazole stock solution to fungal inoculum to achieve 8 μg/ml.
  2. Add Pen/Strep to media to 1% concentration.
  3. Use a Thermo Combi nL to dispense 20 μl/well of assay media into all wells.
  4. Dispense geldanamycin in positive control wells using Thermo Combi nL for a final concentration of 3 μM.
  5. Then, pin 100 nl of test compound from compound plates into assay plates using a CyBi-Well pin tool.
  6. Dispense 20 μl/well of culture into the assay media in all wells.
  7. Incubate the plates were incubated in a humidified (90% humidity) Liconic incubator at 37 °C without agitation for 48 hours.
  8. Dilute Alamar Blue 1:40 in Ca/Mg-free PBS.
  9. To all plates, add 5 μl/well of the diluted Alamar Blue to plates to a final dilution factor of 1:200.
  10. Incubate the plates for 2 hours.
  11. Read the Relative Fluorescence Intensity (RFU) of wells on a standard plate reader as a measure of relative fungal growth. Envision (Perkin Elmer) plate reader set-up: Ex 544 nm, Em 590 nm, Bandwidth 12 nm, Top read.

Counterscreen Mammalian Cell Toxicity Dose Response (AID Nos. 2327, 488809, 493099, 493147)

Materials and Reagents

Clear, flat bottom, black 384-well plates (Corning Catalog no. 3712BC Lot no. 35808016); Geldanamycin (AG Scientific Catalog no. G-1047) 15 mM stock solution in DMSO; Fluconazole (Sequoia Research Ltd.) 2 mg/ml stock solution in PBS; Alamar Blue (AG Scientific Catalog no. DAL1100, Lot no. 151016SA); PBS w/o Calcium and Magnesium (Cellgro Catalog no. 21-040-CV)

Assay Medium

Optimem medium (Invitrogen Catalog no. 31985-070; Lot no. 548536); 2.5% (v/v) Fetal Bovine Serum (Hyclone Catalog no.30071.03; Lot no. ARF26748); 1% (v/v) Pen/Strep solution (Invitrogen Catalog no.15140-122; Lot no. 529891)

Cell Inoculum

Test Strain: NIH-3T3 mammalian fibroblasts (ATCC CRL No. 1658)

  1. Plate cells in 384-well plates at 6,000 cells/well in 20 μl assay medium.
  2. Incubate plates overnight at 37 °C under 5% CO2.

Procedures

  1. After overnight culture, pin compounds into wells at 100 nl/well using the CyBio CyBi-Well pinning instrument.
  2. After pinning compounds, add 20 μl of assay medium supplemented with fluconazole to each well. To a final nominal concentration of 8 μg/ml fluconazole.
  3. Return the plates to the tissue culture incubator and incubate the culture for an additional 48 hours at 37 °C under 5% CO2.
  4. At the completion of this incubation, add Alamar Blue solution diluted 1:40 in PBS to each well (10 μl/well) to achieve a final dilution of 1:200.
  5. Incubate the plates for an additional 2–3 hours at 37 °C under 5% CO2.
  6. Read the Relative Fluorescence Intensity (RFU) of wells was read on a standard plate reader as a measure of relative cell growth. Envision (Perkin Elmer) plate reader set-up: Ex 544 nm, Em 590 m, Bandwidth12 nm, Top read.

Secondary Single Agent (No Fluconazole) Activity Assay Protocol (AID 488802)

Materials and Reagents

Clear, flat bottom, black 384-well plates (Corning Catalog no. 3712BC; Lot no. 35808016);Geldanamycin (AG Scientific Catalog no. G-1047) 15 mM stock solution in DMSO; Pen/Strep (Gibco Catalog no. 10378-016; Lot no21040170) 100X in PBS; Fluconazole (Sigma Catalog no. F829-100MG; Lot no. 098K4715) 2 mg/ml stock solution in PBS; Alamar Blue (AG Scientific Catalog no. DAL1100; Lot no.151016SA);PBS w/o Calcium and Magnesium (Cellgro Catalog no. 21-040-CV)

Synthetic Defined Growth Medium

RPMI 1640 medium, (powder without sodium bicarbonate; Invitrogen 31800-089, Lot 648072);Uridine 8 mg/ml in water (Sigma Catgalog no. U3750; Lot no. 028K0760); Glucose 40% (w/v) in water (Sigma Catalog no. G-5400); MOPS Buffer (Sigma Catalog no. M-1254; Lot no. 098K0033)

  1. Prepare 1X RPMI medium by dissolving 10.4 g powdered medium in 800 ml water.
  2. Add 34.52 g MOPS. While stirring, adjust pH to 7.0 with 10N NaOH.
  3. Add 10 ml uridine solution, 50 ml glucose solution, adjust final volume to 1000 ml. Filter sterilize.
Fungal Inoculum

Test Strain: C. albicans CaCi-2 (10)

  1. Inoculate 500 μl of yeast from cryopreserved stock into 250 ml shaker flask containing 30 ml growth medium. Shake at 30 °C overnight (16 hours).
  2. Read OD 600 of 1 ml of fungal culture in a cuvette using a standard optical density reader (Eppendorf BioPhotometer Plus), with growth medium as a background blank.
  3. Dilute to desired volume of fungal inoculum according to following formula: (1/OD measured) X (Desired Final Volume of Inoculum) X 0.3 = Volume of fungal culture (μl) to add to desired volume of growth medium. When added to media in wells, this yields a calculated starting OD of the fungal inoculum of 0.00015.

Procedures

  1. Add Pen/Strep to the media to a final 1% concentration.
  2. Use a Thermo Combi nL to dispense 20 μl/well of assay media into all wells.
  3. Mix geldanamycin and fluconazole for positive control.
  4. Dispense positive control solution into the positive control wells using Thermo Combi nL for a final concentration of 3 μM geldanamycin, and 8 μg/ml fluconazole.
  5. Then, pin 100 nl of test compound from compound plates into assay plates using a CyBi-Well pin tool.
  6. Dispense 20 μl/well of culture into the assay media in all wells.
  7. Incubate the plates in a humidified (90% humidity) Liconic incubator at 37 °C without agitation for 48 hours.
  8. Dilute Alamar Blue 1:40 in Ca/Mg-free PBS.
  9. To all plates, add 5 μl/well of the diluted Alamar Blue to the plates to a final dilution factor 1:200.
  10. Incubate the plates for 2 hours.
  11. Read Relative Fluorescence Intensity (RFU) of wells was read on a standard plate reader as measure of relative fungal growth. Envision (Perkin Elmer) plate reader settings: Ex 544 nm, Em 590 nm, Bandwidth 12 nm, Top read.

Hsp90 Binning Protocol

Materials and Reagents

Corning white 384-well plate (Corning Catalog no. 8867BC, Lot no. 22609019); Radicicol (Sigma Catalog no. R2146);Tropix Gal-Screen (Applied Biosystems Catalog no. T2359, Lot no. 0903044)

Assay media
SD-ADE Yeast nitrogen base w/o ammonium sulfate, minus adenine

SD Growth Media (MP Biomedical Catalog no. 4027-012; Lot no. 119458); Dextrose 20%;Complete supplement minus adenine (Sunrise Science Catalog no. 1029-100; Lot no. 070409)

  1. To 100 ml SD Growth Media, add 100 ml 20% dextrose and 780 mg Complete Supplement.
  2. Add water to 1 liter. Filter sterilize.
DOC media

SD-ADE (see above); DOC steroid (Sigma Catalog no. D7000)

  1. To 100 ml SD-ADE media, add 1 ml DOC.
Cell Inoculum

Test Strain: ATCC 201238 Saccharomyces cerevisiae W303 reporter strain

  1. Inoculate reporter Saccharomyces strain (ATCC Catalog no. 201238) from cryopreserved stock into 250 ml shaker flask containing 20 ml SD-ADE media.
  2. Incubate the flask overnight (16 hours) at 37 °C and 150 RPM.

Procedures

  1. Read OD 600 of 1 ml of culture in a cuvette using a standard optical density reader (Eppendorf BioPhotometer Plus), with growth medium as a background blank.
  2. Dilute cells to OD = 0.04 in SD-ADE media.
  3. To each 384-well white plate, add 20 μl of diluted culture using a Thermo Combi nL.
  4. Then, pin 100 nl compounds into plates with a CyBi-Well pin tool.
  5. Next, add 5 μM radicicol as a positive control in control wells, dispensing with Thermo Combi nL.
  6. With Combi, dispense 20 μl of 20 μM DOC (steroid) in SD-ADE media in pinned plates.
  7. Incubate the plates at 30 °C for 75 minutes with agitation.
  8. Using Combi, dispense 40 μl Gal-Screen reagent.
  9. Incubate the plates at 30 °C for 25 minutes.
  10. Read the luminescence of wells on a standard plate reader as measure of relative fungal growth. Envision (Perkin Elmer) plate reader set-up: Top read;Luminescence filter (560 nm) at 0.1 second

Appendix C. NMR and LC Data of Probe and Analogs

1H NMR (300 MHz, CDCl3) of the Probe (ML212)

UPLC Chromatogram of the Probe (ML212)

13C NMR (75 MHz, CDCl3) of the Probe (ML212)

HRMS (ESI) of the Probe (ML212)

Spectroscopic Data for SAR Analogs

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 3243873 (Table 3, entry 1)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 3243873

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 13330959 (Table 3, entry 2)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 13330959

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835820 (Table 3, entry 3)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835820

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835839 (Table 3, entry 4)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835839

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835870 (Table 3, entry 5)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835870

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835857 (Table 3, entry 6)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835857

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 13330955 (Table 3, entry 7)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 13330955

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835882 (Table 3, entry 8)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835882

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 20877577 (Table 3, entry 9)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 20877577

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 20877568 (Table 3, entry 10)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 20877568

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 20877557 (Table 3, entry 11)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 20877557

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 5309553 (Table 3, entry 12)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 5309553

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 300385 (Table 4, entry 1)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 300385

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835816 (Table 4, entry 2)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835816

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835825 (Table 4, entry 3)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835825

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835848 (Table 4, entry 4)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835848

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835835 (Table 4, entry 5)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835835

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835881 (Table 4, entry 6)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835881

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835813 (Table 4, entry 7)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835813

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835873 (Table 4, entry 8)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835873

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835834 (Table 4, entry 9)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835834

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835836 (Table 4, entry 10)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835836

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835874 (Table 5, entry 1)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835874

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835837 (Table 5, entry 2)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835837

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835889 (Table 5, entry 3)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835889

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 9551137 (Table 5, entry 4)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 9551137

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835872 (Table 5, entry 5)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835872

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835812 (Table 5, entry 6)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835812

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835815 (Table 5, entry 7)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835815

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835818 (Table 5, entry 8)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835818

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835849 (Table 5, entry 9)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835849

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835842 (Table 5, entry 10)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835842

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835852 (Table 6, entry 1)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835852

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835832 (Table 6, entry 2)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835832

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 46856254 (Table 6, entry 3)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 46856254

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 46856255 (Table 7, entry 1)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 46856255

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835864 (Table 7, entry 2)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835864

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835876 (Table 7, entry 3)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835876

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 46856253 (Table 7, entry 4)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 46856253

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835854 (Table 7, entry 5)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835854

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835863 (Table 7, entry 6)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835863

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835823 (Table 7, entry 7)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835823

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835858 (Table 7, entry 9)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835858

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835865 (Table 7, entry 10)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835865

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835850 (Table 7, entry 11)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835850

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 49835868 (Table 7, entry 12)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 49835868

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 12312246 (Table 8, entry 1)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 12312246

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 100493 (Table 8, entry 2)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 100493

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 46856252 (Table 8, entry 3)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 46856252

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 14420692 (Table 8, entry 4)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 14420692

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 46378661 (Table 8, entry 5)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 46378661

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 4131200 (Table 8, entry 6)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 4131200

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 20877381 (Table 8, entry 7)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 20877381

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 20877322 (Table 8, entry 8)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 20877322

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 46856251 (Table 8, entry 9)

LC-MS of Analog CID 46856251

1H NMR Spectra (300 MHz, CDCl3) of Analog CID 9855970 (Table 8, entry 10)

UPLC-MS of Analog CID 9855970

Appendix D. Compounds Submitted to BioFocus

Table A2Probe and Analog Information

BRDSIDCIDP/AMLSIDML
BRD-K14324645-001-02-010417979249835877Probe003271341212
BRD-K32112425-001-02-311363528349835842Analog003271344NA
BRD-K37150847-001-07-71136352843243873Analog003271343NA
BRD-K67484673-001-02-3113635285100493Analog003271339NA
BRD-K71142328-001-02-011363528649835836Analog003271340NA
BRD-K98546361-001-02-911363528749835857Analog003271342NA

A = analog; P = probe

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