Intravascular clot formation is an important event in a number of cardiovascular diseases. The prevention of blood coagulation has become a major target for new therapeutic agents. Factor Xa (FXa) is a trypsin-like serine protease that plays a key role in the blood coagulation cascade and represents an attractive target for anticoagulant drug development. We have investigated substituents in the central part of a lead compound (3: M55113), and discovered that compound M55551 (34: (R)-4-[(6-Chloro-2-naphthalenyl)sulfonyl]-6-oxo-1-[[1- (4-pyridinyl)-4-piperidinyl]methyl]-2-piperazinecarboxylic acid) is a potent inhibitor of FXa (IC50=0.006 μM), with high selectivity for FXa over trypsin and thrombin. The activity of this compound is ten times more powerful than the lead compound. © 2002 Pharmaceutical Society of Japan.
CITATION STYLE
Nishida, H., Miyazaki, Y., Mukaihira, T., Saitoh, F., Fukui, M., Harada, K., … Mochizuki, H. (2002). Synthesis and evaluation of 1-arylsulfonyl-3-piperazinone derivatives as a factor Xa inhibitor II. Substituent effect on biological activities. Chemical and Pharmaceutical Bulletin, 50(9), 1187–1194. https://doi.org/10.1248/cpb.50.1187
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