Issue 36, 2024

The backbone constitution drives passive permeability independent of side chains in depsipeptide and peptide macrocycles inspired by ent-verticilide

Abstract

The number of peptide-like scaffolds found in late-stage drug development is increasing, but a critical unanswered question in the field is whether substituents (side chains) or the backbone drive passive permeability. The backbone is scrutinized in this study. Five series of macrocyclic peptidic compounds were prepared, and their passive permeability was determined (PAMPA, Caco-2), to delineate structure–permeability relationships. Each series was based on the cell-permeable antiarrhythmic compound ent-verticilide, a cyclic oligomeric depsipeptide (COD) containing repeating ester/N-Me amide didepsipeptide monomers. One key finding is that native lipophilic ester functionality can impart a favorable level of permeability, but ester content alone is not the final determinant – the analog with highest Papp was discovered by a single ester-to-N-H amide replacement. Furthermore, the relative composition of esters and N-Me amides in a series had more nuanced permeability behavior. Overall, a systematic approach to structure–permeability correlations suggests that a combinatorial-like investigation of functionality in peptidic or peptide-like compounds could better identify leads with optimal passive permeability, perhaps prior to modification of side chains.

Graphical abstract: The backbone constitution drives passive permeability independent of side chains in depsipeptide and peptide macrocycles inspired by ent-verticilide

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Edge Article
Submitted
25 Apr 2024
Accepted
09 Aug 2024
First published
15 Aug 2024
This article is Open Access

All publication charges for this article have been paid for by the Royal Society of Chemistry
Creative Commons BY-NC license

Chem. Sci., 2024,15, 14977-14987

The backbone constitution drives passive permeability independent of side chains in depsipeptide and peptide macrocycles inspired by ent-verticilide

M. P. Thorpe, A. N. Smith, D. J. Blackwell, C. R. Hopkins, B. C. Knollmann, W. S. Akers and J. N. Johnston, Chem. Sci., 2024, 15, 14977 DOI: 10.1039/D4SC02758B

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