Abstract
Mycobacterium tuberculosis infection is responsible for a global pandemic. New drugs are needed that do not show cross-resistance with the existing front-line therapeutics. A triazine antitubercular hit led to the design of a related pyrimidine family. The synthesis of a focused series of these analogs facilitated exploration of their in vitro activity, in vitro cytotoxicity, and physiochemical and absorption-distribution-metabolism-excretion properties. Select pyrimidines were then evaluated for their pharmacokinetic profiles in mice. The findings suggest a rationale for the further evolution of this promising series of antitubercular small molecules, which appear to share some similarities with the clinical compound PA-824 in terms of activation, while highlighting more general guidelines for the optimization of small-molecule antitubercular agents.
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Inoyama, D., Paget, S. D., Russo, R., Kandasamy, S., Kumar, P., Singleton, E., … Freundlicha, J. S. (2018). Novel pyrimidines as antitubercular agents. Antimicrobial Agents and Chemotherapy, 62(3). https://doi.org/10.1128/AAC.02063-17
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