Abstract

Recent studies and clinical evidence have strongly supported the development of adenosine A2A receptor (A2AR) antagonists as novel approaches for cancer immunotherapy. By screening our in-house compound library, a pyridinone hit compound (1) with weak A2AR antagonistic activity was identified. Further structure-activity relationship studies revealed a series of pyridinone derivatives with strong potency. Compound 38 stood out with a potent A2AR antagonistic activity (IC50 = 29.0 nM), good mouse liver microsomal metabolic stability (t1/2 = 86.1 min), and excellent oral bioavailability (F = 86.1%). Of note, 38 effectively enhanced the activation and killing ability of T cells in vitro by down-regulation of immunosuppressive molecules (LAG-3 and TIM-3) and up-regulation of effector molecules (GZMB, IFNG, and IL-2). Moreover, 38 exhibited excellent in vivo antitumor activity with a tumor growth inhibition (TGI) of 56.0% in the MC38 tumor model via oral administration, demonstrating its potential as a novel A2AR antagonist candidate for cancer immunotherapy.

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