Chemical Biology and Drug Design, volume 98, issue 4, pages 582-603
Synthesis, biological evaluation, molecular modeling, and structural analysis of new pyrazole and pyrazolone derivatives as N‐formyl peptide receptors agonists
Claudia Vergelli
1
,
Letizia Crocetti
1
,
Gabriella Guerrini
1
,
Niccolò Cantini
1
,
Liliya N. Kirpotina
3
,
Igor A Schepetkin
3
,
Agostino Cilibrizzi
4
,
Mark T. Quinn
3
,
Patrizia Rossi
5
,
Paola Paoli
5
,
Maria Paola Giovannoni
1
1
Publication type: Journal Article
Publication date: 2021-07-01
Journal:
Chemical Biology and Drug Design
scimago Q2
wos Q3
SJR: 0.579
CiteScore: 5.1
Impact factor: 3.2
ISSN: 17470277, 17470285
Organic Chemistry
Drug Discovery
Biochemistry
Pharmacology
Molecular Medicine
Abstract
N-formyl peptide receptors (FPR1, FPR2, and FPR3) play key roles in the regulation of inflammatory processes, and recently, it was demonstrated that FPR1 and FPR2 have a dual role in the progression/suppression of some cancers. Therefore, FPRs represent an important therapeutic target for the treatment of both cancer and inflammatory diseases. Previously, we identified selective or mixed FPR agonists with pyridazinone or pyridinone scaffolds showing a common 4-(bromophenyl)acetamide fragment, which was essential for activity. We report here new pyrazole and pyrazolone derivatives as restricted analogues of the above 6-membered compounds, all exhibiting the same 4-bromophenylacetamide side chain. Most new products had low or absent FPR agonist activity, suggesting that the pyrazole nucleus was not appropriate for FPR agonists. This hypothesis was confirmed by molecular modeling studies, which highlighted that the five-membered scaffold was responsible for a worse arrangement of the molecules in the receptor binding site.
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