Exploration of Long-Chain Vitamin E Metabolites for the Discovery of a Highly Potent, Orally Effective, and Metabolically Stable 5-LOX Inhibitor that Limits Inflammation

Konstantin Neukirch, Khaled Alsabil, Chau-Phi Dinh, Rossella Bilancia, Martin Raasch, Alexia Ville, Ida Cerqua, Guillaume Viault, Dimitri Bréard, Simona Pace, Veronika Temml, Elena Brunner, Paul M Jordan, Marta C Marques, Konstantin Loeser, André Gollowitzer 1 2, Stephan Permann, Jana Gerstmeier, Stefan Lorkowski, Hermann Stuppner, Ulrike Garscha, Tiago Rodrigues, Gonçalo J L Bernardes, Daniela Schuster, Denis Séraphin, Pascal Richomme, Antonietta Rossi, Alexander S Mosig, Fiorentina Roviezzo, Oliver Werz, Jean-Jacques Helesbeux, Andreas Koeberle

Abstract

Endogenous long-chain metabolites of vitamin E (LCMs) mediate immune functions by targeting 5-lipoxygenase (5-LOX) and increasing the systemic concentrations of resolvin E3, a specialized proresolving lipid mediator. SAR studies on semisynthesized analogues highlight α-amplexichromanol (27a), which allosterically inhibits 5-LOX, being considerably more potent than endogenous LCMs in human primary immune cells and blood. Other enzymes within lipid mediator biosynthesis were not substantially inhibited, except for microsomal prostaglandin E2 synthase-1. Compound 27a is metabolized by sulfation and β-oxidation in human liver-on-chips and exhibits superior metabolic stability in mice over LCMs. Pharmacokinetic studies show distribution of 27a from plasma to the inflamed peritoneal cavity and lung. In parallel, 5-LOX-derived leukotriene levels decrease, and the inflammatory reaction is suppressed in reconstructed human epidermis, murine peritonitis, and experimental asthma in mice. Our study highlights 27a as an orally active, LCM-inspired drug candidate that limits inflammation with superior potency and metabolic stability to the endogenous lead.

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