Abstract

Analogues of (S)-1-[6-amino-2[[hydroxy(4-phenylbutyl)phosphinyl] oxy]-1-oxohexyl]-L-proline (1, SQ 29,852) in which the terminal proline residue has been replaced by a variety of substituted and heteroatom-substituted prolines, N-arylglycines, N-cycloalkylglycines, and bicyclic amino acids have been synthesized and evaluated as inhibitors of angiotensin converting enzyme in vitro and in vivo. In general, the addition of lipophilic substituents to the 4-position of proline of the parent phosphonate 1 resulted in substantial increases in in vitro activity. The largest improvements were observed in the case of cis-benzyl (36-fold) and dithioketal (24-fold) analogues 2r and 2x, respectively. These enhancements of in vitro activity were accompanied by modest increases (2-3.5-fold) in in vivo (iv) activity. Among the various terminal amino acid replacements examined in this study, the indoline-based analogue 2i was by far the most potent compound on iv administration in the normotensive rat.

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