A fingerprint pair analysis of hERG inhibition data

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Abstract

Background: Drugs that bind to the human Ether-a-go-go Related Gene (hERG) potassium channel and block its ion conduction can lead to Torsade de Pointes (TdP), a fatal ventricular arrhythmia. Thus, compounds are screened for hERG inhibition in the drug development process; those found to be active face a difficult road to approval. Knowing which structural transformations reduce hERG binding would be helpful in the lead optimization phase of drug discovery.Results: To identify such transformations, we carried out a comprehensive analysis of all approximately 33,000 compound pairs in the Novartis internal database which have IC50 values in the dofetilide displacement assay. Most molecular transformations have only a single example in the data set; however, a few dozen transformations have sufficient numbers for statistical analysis.Conclusions: We observe that transformations which increased polarity (for example adding an oxygen, or an sp 2 nitrogen), decreased lipophilicity (removing carbons), or decreased positive charge consistently reduced hERG inhibition between 3- and 10-fold. The largest observed reduction in hERG was from a transformation from imidazole to methyl tetrazole. We also observe that some changes in aromatic ring substituents (for example hydrogen to methoxy) can also reduce hERG binding in vitro. © 2013 Springer and Sokolnicki; licensee Chemistry Central Ltd.

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Springer, C., & Sokolnicki, K. L. (2013). A fingerprint pair analysis of hERG inhibition data. Chemistry Central Journal, 7(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/1752-153X-7-167

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