Low-molecular-weight peptidic and cyclic antagonists of the receptor for the complement factor C5a

AM Finch, AK Wong, NJ Paczkowski… - Journal of medicinal …, 1999 - ACS Publications
AM Finch, AK Wong, NJ Paczkowski, SK Wadi, DJ Craik, DP Fairlie, SM Taylor
Journal of medicinal chemistry, 1999ACS Publications
Activation of the human complement system of plasma proteins during immunological host
defense can result in overproduction of potent proinflammatory peptides such as the
anaphylatoxin C5a. Excessive levels of C5a are associated with numerous
immunoinflammatory diseases, but there is as yet no clinically available antagonist to
regulate the effects of C5a. We now describe a series of small molecules derived from the C-
terminus of C5a, some of which are the most potent low-molecular-weight C5a receptor …
Activation of the human complement system of plasma proteins during immunological host defense can result in overproduction of potent proinflammatory peptides such as the anaphylatoxin C5a. Excessive levels of C5a are associated with numerous immunoinflammatory diseases, but there is as yet no clinically available antagonist to regulate the effects of C5a. We now describe a series of small molecules derived from the C-terminus of C5a, some of which are the most potent low-molecular-weight C5a receptor antagonists reported to date for the human polymorphonuclear leukocyte (PMN) C5a receptor. 1H NMR spectroscopy was used to determine solution structures for two cyclic antagonists and to indicate that antagonism is related to a turn conformation, which can be stabilized in cyclic molecules that are preorganized for receptor binding. While several cyclic derivatives were of similar antagonistic potency, the most potent antagonist was a hexapeptide-derived macrocycle AcF[OPdChaWR] with an IC50 = 20 nM against a maximal concentration of C5a (100 nM) on intact human PMNs. Such potent C5a antagonists may be useful probes to investigate the role of C5a in host defenses and to develop therapeutic agents for the treatment of many currently intractable inflammatory conditions.
ACS Publications