Is There Enough Evidence to Classify Cycloalkyl Amine Substituents as Structural Alerts

2020 
Abstract Basic amine substituents provide several pharmacokinetic benefits relative to acidic and neutral functional groups, and have been extensively utilized as substituents of choice in drug design. On occasions, basic amines have been associated with off-target pharmacology via interactions with aminergic G-protein coupled receptors, ion-channels, kinases, etc. Structural features associated with the promiscuous nature of basic amines have been well-studied, and can be mitigated in a preclinical drug discovery environment. In addition to the undesirable secondary pharmacology, α-carbon oxidation of certain secondary or tertiary cycloalkyl amines can generate electrophilic iminium and aldehyde metabolites, potentially capable of covalent adduction to proteins or DNA. Consequently, cycloalkyl amines have been viewed as structural alerts (SAs), analogous to functional groups such as anilines, furans, thiophenes, etc., which are oxidized to reactive metabolites that generate immunogenic haptens by covalently binding to host proteins. Detailed survey of the literature, however, suggests that cases where preclinical or clinical toxicity has been explicitly linked to the metabolic activation of a cycloalkyl amine group are extremely rare. Moreover, there is a distinct possibility for the formation of electrophilic iminium/amino-aldehyde metabolites with numerous cycloalkyl amine-containing marketed drugs, since stable ring cleavage products have been characterized as metabolites in human mass balance studies. In the present work, a critical analysis of the evidence for and against the role of iminium ions/aldehydes as mediators of toxicity is discussed with a special emphasis on often time overlooked detoxication pathways of these reactive species to innocuous metabolites.
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