Allosteric inhibition of human factor XIa: Discovery of monosulfated benzofurans as a class of promising inhibitors

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Abstract

Factor XIa (fXIa) is being recognized as a prime target for developing safer anticoagulants. To discover synthetic, small, allosteric inhibitors of fXIa, we screened an in-house, unique library of 65 molecules displaying many distinct scaffolds and varying levels of sulfation. Of these, monosulfated benzofurans were the only group of molecules found to inhibit fXIa (∼100% efficacy) and led to the identification of monosulfated trimer 24 (IC 50 0.82 μM) as the most potent inhibitor. Michaelis-Menten kinetics studies revealed a classic noncompetitive mechanism of action for 24. Although monosulfated, the inhibitors did not compete with unfractionated heparin alluding to a novel site of interaction. Fluorescence quenching studies indicated that trimer 24 induces major conformational changes in the active site of fXIa. Docking studies identified a site near Lys255 on the A3 domain of fXIa as the most probable site of binding for 24. Factor XIa devoid of the A3 domain displayed a major defect in the inhibition potency of 24 supporting the docking prediction. Our work presents the sulfated benzofuran scaffold as a promising framework to develop allosteric fXIa inhibitors that likely function through the A3 domain. © 2014 American Chemical Society.

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Argade, M. D., Mehta, A. Y., Sarkar, A., & Desai, U. R. (2014). Allosteric inhibition of human factor XIa: Discovery of monosulfated benzofurans as a class of promising inhibitors. Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 57(8), 3559–3569. https://doi.org/10.1021/jm5002698

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