Abstract

We describe an atypical amine bioisostere, the trisubstituted hydroxylamine, that upon incorporation into an approved dual cSRC/BCR-ABL1 kinase inhibitor yields 9, a compound that retains potent biological activity and couples it with improved drug efflux and hERG affinity at the expense of only a 2 atomic mass unit increase in molecular weight. Contrary to the common expectation for hydroxylamines in medicinal chemistry, 9 is well tolerated in vivo and lacks the mutagenicity and genotoxicity so often ascribed to lesser substituted hydroxylamines. A matched molecular pair (MMP) analysis suggests that the beneficial properties conferred by the N-alkyl to N-noralkoxy switch arises from a reduction in basicity of the piperazine unit. Overall, these results lend additional support to the use of trisubstituted hydroxylamines as bioisosteres of N-alkyl groups that are not involved in key polar interactions.

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