Article
Author: Khani, Yaser ; Lembo, Angelo ; Mangette, John E. ; Coe, Samuel ; Muñoz-Sanjuan, Ignacio ; Herrmann, Frank ; Vecchi, Andrea ; Kotey, Adrian ; Brown, Christopher J. ; Schaertl, Sabine ; Gadouleau, Elise ; Tookey, Jack ; Orsatti, Laura ; Sandiego, Christine ; Giles, Paul R. ; Esposito, Simone ; Hayes, Sarah ; Marriner, Gwendolyn A. ; Bertoglio, Daniele ; Marston, Richard W. ; Dickie, Anthony P. ; Prime, Michael E. ; Nag, Sangram ; Davis, Randall ; Haller, Scott ; Hsai, Ming Min ; Haber, James ; Mills, Matthew R. ; Johnson, Peter D. ; Liu, Longbin ; Herbst, Todd ; Forsberg-Morén, Anton ; Staelens, Steven ; Dominguez, Celia ; Bard, Jonathan ; Halldin, Christer ; Monteagudo, Edith ; Veneziano, Maria ; Anzillotti, Luca ; Greenaway, Catherine ; Chen, Xuemei ; Khetarpal, Vinod ; Sproston, Joanne ; Heßmann, Manuela ; Turner, Penelope A.
Therapeutic interventions are being developed for Huntington's disease (HD), a hallmark of which is mutant huntingtin protein (mHTT) aggregates. Following the advancement to human testing of two [11C]-PET ligands for aggregated mHTT, attributes for further optimization were identified. We replaced the pyridazinone ring of CHDI-180 with a pyrimidine ring and minimized off-target binding using brain homogenate derived from Alzheimer's disease patients. The major in vivo metabolic pathway via aldehyde oxidase was blocked with a 2-methyl group on the pyrimidine ring. A strategically placed ring-nitrogen on the benzoxazole core ensured high free fraction in the brain without introducing efflux. Replacing a methoxy pendant with a fluoro-ethoxy group and introducing deuterium atoms suppressed oxidative defluorination and accumulation of [18F]-signal in bones. The resulting PET ligand, CHDI-650, shows a rapid brain uptake and washout profile in non-human primates and is now being advanced to human testing.