Inhibitors of trypsin-like enzymes

Drug – bio-affecting and body treating compositions – Designated organic active ingredient containing – Peptide containing doai

Reexamination Certificate

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C514S015800, C514S016700, C514S017400, C514S019300, C530S330000, C530S331000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06313096

ABSTRACT:

This invention relates to thrombin inhibitors.
Thrombin, the last enzyme in the coagulation system, cleaves soluble fibrinogen to fibrin, which is then crosslinked and forms an insoluble gel forming the matrix for a thrombus. When a vessel is damaged, the above process is necessary to stop bleeding. Under normal circumstances there is no measurable amount of thrombin present in plasma. Increase of the thrombin concentration can result in formation of clots, which can lead to thromboembolic disease, one of the most common serious medical problems of our time.
Thrombin contributes to haemostatic control by means of several biological reactions. In addition to its primary function, the conversion of fibrinogen to fibrin, thrombin activates Factor XIII, which is responsible for the crosslinking of fibrin. Thrombin also acts by means of a positive feed back mechanism involving the activation of Factors V and VIII, which both are necessary for its own formation from prothrombin. Thrombin has another essential role: its binding to platelets inititates platelet release and aggregation which is responsible for primary haemostasis.
The role and regulation of thrombin in thrombogenesis is summarized schematically in FIG.
1
. The reactions of thrombin are further controlled by natural inhibitors in plasma. The most important of these are antithrombin III and heparin. These two compounds have been isolated and are therapeutically and prophylactically used in conditions where there is an imbalance in the haemostatic mechanism with risk for prothrombin activation.
Synthetic thrombin inhibitors, having oral activity, would be useful as alternatives to the parenteral administration of these natural inhibitors. Much research in this area has resulted in the synthesis of good inhibitors of thrombin in vitro, but as yet there is no really good candidate for oral therapeutic use. By imitating amino acid sequences of fibrinogen, the important natural substrate of thrombin, several good short peptide substrates for thrombin have been produced. These peptide substrates have also been transformed into inhibitors of the enzyme. Thus, the chromogenic substrates D-Phe-Pro-Arg-pNA and D-Phe-Pip-Arg-PNA mimic the sequence preceding the bond split by thrombin. The corresponding reversible and irreversible inhibitors, D-Phe-Pro-Arginal and D-Phe-Pro-Arg-CH
2
Cl show inhibition in vitro in the 10
−8
M range.
Chloromethylketones are generally too nonspecifically reactive to be ideal for therapeutic use, and the peptide aldehyde exemplified above has quite a low LD
50
value.
Factor Xa is the coagulation enzyme responsible for the generation of thrombin by limited proteolysis of its zymogen, pro-thrombin. On a weight for weight basis factor Xa is at least 10 times more thrombogenic in vivo than thrombin. This arises from the fact that factor Xa is one step above thrombin in the amplifying cascade system, so that one molecule of factor Xa can generate many molecules of thrombin from its precursor. Its protency may also arise from the rather slow removal of factor Xa by the body. Thrombin, unlike factor Xa, is rapidly cleared from circulating blood onto high affinity sites on the vessel wall. The central position of factor Xa at the junction of the intrinsic and the extrinsic pathways should make it a suitable target for modulating the haemostatic mechanism.
Kallikrein is formed from prekallikrein by the action of factor XII, when located on a negatively charged surface. Kallikrein in turn can cleave factor XII to factor XIIa, thereby forming a reciprocal activation system. Factor XIIa is the first enzyme of the intrinsic part of the coagulation system. The significance of the contact system is probably as a surface mediated defense mechanism, and a large scale activation of the system is normally seen during shock or disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC). The role of kallikrein at this stage is to cleave high molecular weight kininogen with the release of the vasodilator, bradykinin. Bradykinin also causes increased vascular permeability, pain and migration of the neutrophil leucocytes. Inhibitors of kinin formation have been shown to be beneficial in certain types of inflammation, including arthritis and pancreatitits, and may be useful also in the treatment of asthma. The only substance that has attained clinical significance as a kallikrein inhibitor, is aprotinin (Trasylol). Aprotinin is a polypeptide of molecular weight 6.500, and forms a stable complex with proteases, having a binding constant of 10
−10
-10
−13
M.
Fibrinolysis is the process which causes an enzymatic dissolution of fibrinogen and fibrin clots. Plasma contains a protein, plasminogen, which under the influence of various activators is converted to plasmin, a proteolytic enzyme, the activity of which resembles that of trypsin. Plasmin breaks down fibrinogen and fibrin to fibrin/fibrinogen degradation products.
Under normal conditions, the fibrinolysis system is in balance with the coagulation system. Small thrombi formed in the blood stream can be dissolved enzymatically and the circulation through the vessels can be restored by the activation of the fibrinolytic system in the body. If the fibrinolytic activity is too high, it may cause or prolong bleeding. The activity can be inhibited by natural inhibitors in the blood.
Boronic acids have been studied as inhibitors of various serine esterases and proteases. The first boronic acid-containing amino acid analog to be used as a protease inhibitor was the boronic acid analog of N-acetyl L-phenylalanine, which was used as an inhibitor of chymotrypsin and subtilisin. Peptide boronic acids have been used as inhibitors of chymotrypsin, subtilisin, and elastases.
The interaction of boronic acids with proteases in biological systems is known and various simple boronic acids have been shown to be sufficiently nontoxic for use in humans. Peptide boronic acid inhibitors of elastase have recently been used in animal trials in relation to emphysema. Unlike the peptide chloromethylketones, there was no toxicity reported at biologically effective dosage levels.
The parent application, Ser. No. 181,511, described the preparation of the boroarginine compound Z-D-Phe-Pro-boroArg. This compound name corresponds to the structure of formula I
in which Z is
or, in protected form, of formula II
where Z is as stated above
and Pro is
The compound was described as being produced by the synthetic route:
However, it has now been found that the product of this synthesis is not the above structure II but the methoxy compound of formula XII
and although the product does not have the structure previously assigned to it, it is nevertheless a strong thrombin inhibitor.
The proton NMR spectrum of the product, which was appended as
FIG. 3
of the parent application, and is reproduced as
FIG. 2
of the present application, is indeed consistent with the structure of formula XII, as it shows a strong singlet peak at 3.25 ppm attributable to the methoxy group.


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Morrison & Boyd, “Organic Chemistry” 3rd Ed. (Allyn and Bacon, Inc.) pp. 456-457, Jun. 1979.*
Bajusz et al., “inhibition of Thrombin and Trypsin by Tripeptided Aldehydes,”Int. J. Peptide and Protein Res., 12:217-221 (1978).
Chang, “Thrombin specificity,”Eur. J. Biochem.

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