Article
Author: Manam, Padma ; Santos, Cipriano ; Bigi-Botterill, Simone V. ; Sabat, Mark ; Carney, Daniel W. ; Ermolieff, Jacques ; Flick, Andrew C. ; Balakrishna, Deepika ; Selimkhanov, Jangir ; Lindsey, Erick A. ; DeMent, Kevin ; Gibson, Tony S. ; Proffitt, Chris ; Dougan, Douglas R. ; Vu, Phong ; Kwok, Lily ; Chen, Chien-Hung ; de Jong, Ron ; Chambers, Alison ; Manohar, Rohan ; Jennings, Andy ; Johns, Deidre ; Johnson, Lucas K. ; Qin, Ling ; Wang, Haixia ; Miura, Joanne ; Zou, Hua ; Hernandez-Torres, Gloria ; Ivetac, Tony ; Xu, Rui ; Fullenwider, Cody
Selective inhibition of the RGD (Arg-Gly-Asp) integrin αvβ1 has been recently identified as an attractive therapeutic approach for the treatment of liver fibrosis given its function, target expression, and safety profile. Our identification of a non-RGD small molecule lead followed by focused, systematic changes to the core structure utilizing a crystal structure, in silico modeling, and a tractable synthetic approach resulted in the identification of a potent small molecule exhibiting a remarkable affinity for αvβ1 relative to several other integrin isoforms measured. Azabenzimidazolone 25 demonstrated antifibrotic efficacy in an in vivo rat liver fibrosis model and represents a tool compound capable of further exploring the biological consequences of selective αvβ1 inhibition.