WO2007087505A2 - Compounds for the treatment of metabolic disorders - Google Patents

Compounds for the treatment of metabolic disorders Download PDF

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Publication number
WO2007087505A2
WO2007087505A2 PCT/US2007/060832 US2007060832W WO2007087505A2 WO 2007087505 A2 WO2007087505 A2 WO 2007087505A2 US 2007060832 W US2007060832 W US 2007060832W WO 2007087505 A2 WO2007087505 A2 WO 2007087505A2
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compound
carbon atoms
hydrogen
formula
alkyl
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PCT/US2007/060832
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French (fr)
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WO2007087505A3 (en
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Shalini Sharma
Reid W. Von Borstel
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Wellstat Therapeutics Corporation
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Priority to US12/160,854 priority Critical patent/US7820721B2/en
Priority to EP07717340A priority patent/EP1976377A4/en
Priority to CA002637375A priority patent/CA2637375A1/en
Priority to JP2008552536A priority patent/JP2009531280A/en
Publication of WO2007087505A2 publication Critical patent/WO2007087505A2/en
Publication of WO2007087505A3 publication Critical patent/WO2007087505A3/en

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07CACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07C49/00Ketones; Ketenes; Dimeric ketenes; Ketonic chelates
    • C07C49/76Ketones containing a keto group bound to a six-membered aromatic ring
    • C07C49/84Ketones containing a keto group bound to a six-membered aromatic ring containing ether groups, groups, groups, or groups
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61KPREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
    • A61K31/00Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
    • A61K31/13Amines
    • A61K31/135Amines having aromatic rings, e.g. ketamine, nortriptyline
    • A61K31/138Aryloxyalkylamines, e.g. propranolol, tamoxifen, phenoxybenzamine
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P1/00Drugs for disorders of the alimentary tract or the digestive system
    • A61P1/16Drugs for disorders of the alimentary tract or the digestive system for liver or gallbladder disorders, e.g. hepatoprotective agents, cholagogues, litholytics
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P13/00Drugs for disorders of the urinary system
    • A61P13/12Drugs for disorders of the urinary system of the kidneys
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P15/00Drugs for genital or sexual disorders; Contraceptives
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P21/00Drugs for disorders of the muscular or neuromuscular system
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P25/00Drugs for disorders of the nervous system
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P27/00Drugs for disorders of the senses
    • A61P27/02Ophthalmic agents
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P27/00Drugs for disorders of the senses
    • A61P27/02Ophthalmic agents
    • A61P27/12Ophthalmic agents for cataracts
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P3/00Drugs for disorders of the metabolism
    • A61P3/04Anorexiants; Antiobesity agents
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P3/00Drugs for disorders of the metabolism
    • A61P3/06Antihyperlipidemics
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P3/00Drugs for disorders of the metabolism
    • A61P3/08Drugs for disorders of the metabolism for glucose homeostasis
    • A61P3/10Drugs for disorders of the metabolism for glucose homeostasis for hyperglycaemia, e.g. antidiabetics
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P5/00Drugs for disorders of the endocrine system
    • A61P5/48Drugs for disorders of the endocrine system of the pancreatic hormones
    • A61P5/50Drugs for disorders of the endocrine system of the pancreatic hormones for increasing or potentiating the activity of insulin
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P9/00Drugs for disorders of the cardiovascular system
    • A61P9/10Drugs for disorders of the cardiovascular system for treating ischaemic or atherosclerotic diseases, e.g. antianginal drugs, coronary vasodilators, drugs for myocardial infarction, retinopathy, cerebrovascula insufficiency, renal arteriosclerosis
    • AHUMAN NECESSITIES
    • A61MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
    • A61PSPECIFIC THERAPEUTIC ACTIVITY OF CHEMICAL COMPOUNDS OR MEDICINAL PREPARATIONS
    • A61P9/00Drugs for disorders of the cardiovascular system
    • A61P9/12Antihypertensives
    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C07ORGANIC CHEMISTRY
    • C07CACYCLIC OR CARBOCYCLIC COMPOUNDS
    • C07C43/00Ethers; Compounds having groups, groups or groups
    • C07C43/02Ethers
    • C07C43/20Ethers having an ether-oxygen atom bound to a carbon atom of a six-membered aromatic ring
    • C07C43/23Ethers having an ether-oxygen atom bound to a carbon atom of a six-membered aromatic ring containing hydroxy or O-metal groups

Definitions

  • Diabetes mellitus is a major cause of morbidity and mortality.
  • Chronically elevated blood glucose leads to debilitating complications: nephropathy, often necessitating dialysis or renal transplant; peripheral neuropathy; retinopathy leading to blindness; ulceration of the legs and feet, leading to amputation; fatty liver disease, sometimes progressing to cirrhosis; and vulnerability to coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction.
  • Type I diabetes or insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is due to autoimmune destruction of insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreatic islets. The onset of this disease is usually in childhood or adolescence. Treatment consists primarily of multiple daily injections of insulin, combined with frequent testing of blood glucose levels to guide adjustment of insulin doses, because excess insulin can cause hypoglycemia and consequent impairment of brain and other functions.
  • IDDM insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus
  • Type II, or noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus typically develops in adulthood.
  • NIDDM is associated with resistance of glucose-utilizing tissues like adipose tissue, muscle, and liver, to the actions of insulin.
  • the pancreatic islet beta cells compensate by secreting excess insulin.
  • Eventual islet failure results in decompensation and chronic hyperglycemia.
  • moderate islet insufficiency can precede or coincide with peripheral insulin resistance.
  • insulin rclcasers which directly stimulate insulin release, carrying the risk of hypoglycemia
  • prandial insulin releasers which potentiate glucose-induced insulin secretion, and must be taken before each meal
  • biguanides including metformin, which attenuate hepatic gluconeogenesis (which is paradoxically elevated in diabetes)
  • insulin sensitizers for example the thiazolidinedione derivatives rosiglitazone and piogiitazone, which improve peripheral responsiveness to insulin, but which have side effects like weight gain, edema, and occasional liver toxicity
  • insulin injections which are often necessary in the later stages of NIDDM wl failed under chronic hyperstimulation.
  • Insulin resistance can also occur without marked hyperglycemia, and is generally associated with atherosclerosis, obesity, hyperlipidemia, and essential hypertension. This cluster of abnormalities constitutes the "metabolic syndrome” or “insulin resistance syndrome”. Insulin resistance is also associated with fatty liver, which can progress to chronic inflammation (NASH; "nonalcoholic steatohepatitis”), fibrosis, and cirrhosis. Cumulatively, insulin resistance syndromes, including but not limited to diabetes, underlie many of the major causes of morbidity and death of people over age 40.
  • NASH nonalcoholic steatohepatitis
  • This invention provides a biologically active agent as described below.
  • This invention provides the use of the biologically active agent described below in the manufacture of a medicament for the treatment of insulin resistance syndrome, diabetes, cachexia, hyperlipidemia, fatly liver disease, obesity, atherosclerosis or arteriosclerosis.
  • This invention provides methods of treating a mammalian subject with insulin resistance syndrome, diabetes, cachexia, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, obesity, atherosclerosis or arteriosclerosis comprising administering to the subject an effecti ⁇ biologically active agent described below.
  • This invention provides a pnarmaceuticai composition comprising the biologically active agent described below and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
  • the biologically active agent in accordance with this invention is a compound of Formula I:
  • R 5 is hydrogen or alkyl having one, two, three, four or five carbon atoms;
  • A is phenyl, unsubstituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfluorotnethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and perfluoromethoxy; or cycloalkyl having from 3 to 6 ring carbon atoms wherein the cycloalkyl is unsubstituted or one or two ring carbons are ndependently mono-substituted by methyl or ethyl; or a 5 or 6 membered heteroaromatic ring having 1 or 2 ring heteroatom
  • the biologically active agent can be a pharmaceutically acceptable salt of the compound of Formula I.
  • biologically active agents of this invention will have activity in one or more of the biological activity assays described below, which are established animal models of human diabetes and insulin resistance syndrome. Therefore such agents would be useful in the treatment of diabetes and insulin resistance syndrome.
  • alkyl means a linear or branched-chain alkyl group.
  • An alkyl group identified as having a certain number of carbon atoms means any alkyl group having the specified number of carbons.
  • an alkyl having three carbon atoms can be propyl or isopropyl; and alkyl having four carbon atoms can be n-butyl, 1 - methylpropyl, 2-methylpropyl or t-butyl.
  • halo refers to one or more of fluoro, chloro, bromo, and iodo.
  • perfluoro as in perfluoromethyl or perfluoromelhoxy, means that the group in question has fluorine atoms in place of all of the hydrogen atoms.
  • is 2,6-dimethylphenyl. Examples of such compounds include Compounds CY, CZ and DA.
  • the agent is in substantially (at least 98%) pure form.
  • the biologically active agents of the present invention can be made in accordance with the following reaction schemes.
  • R 1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • R 2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • one of R 3 and R 4 is hydrogen or hydroxy and the other is hydrogen
  • R 5 is hydrogen or alkyl having 1 to 5 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
  • A, t, m, n, q, R 1 , and R 2 are as above.
  • R 6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms.
  • R 7 is H.
  • R 8 is alkyl having 1 to 5 carbon atoms and Y is a halide.
  • the compound of formula II can be converted to the compound of foi reaction of step (a) by reducing the ester group to the alcohol. This reaction is carried out utilizing a conventional reducing agent, which converts ester to alcohol. In carrying out this reaction it is generally preferred to utilize an alkali metal hydride such as lithium aluminium hydride as the reducing agent.
  • the compound of formula III can be converted to the compound of formula V where R 5 is alkyl having one to five carbon atoms by alkylating the compound of formula III with the compound of formula IV.
  • Any conventional method of etherification of a hydroxyl group with a halide in the presence of a suitable base such as potassium carbonate, sodium hydride, triethylamine, pyridine and the like, can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (b).
  • the reaction can be carried out in conventional solvents such as dimethylformamide, tetrahydrofuran, dichloromethane and the like.
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • the compound of formula V is the compound of formula I where R 5 is alkyl having 1 to 5 carbon atoms.
  • A is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group during the reduction of the corresponding formula II to formula III.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the protecting group can be deprotected after the alleviation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 1
  • R 1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • R 2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • R 3 and R 4 are hydrogen and R 6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
  • A, t, m, n, R 2 , R 3 , and R 4 are as above.
  • R 6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, and Y is a leaving group.
  • the compound of formula VI can be converted to the compound of formula II via reaction of step (c) using Mitsunobu condensation of VI with VII using triphenylphosphine and diethyl azodicarboxylate or diisopropyl azodicarboxylate.
  • the reaction is carried out in a suitable solvent for example tetrahydrofuran. Any of the conditions conventionally used in Mitsunobu reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (c).
  • the compound of formula II can also be prepared by etherifying or alkylating the compound of formula VI with the compound of formula VIII as in reaction of step (c).
  • Y include but are not limited to mesyloxy, tosyloxy, chloro, bromo, iodo, and the like. Any conventional method of etherifying of a hydroxyl group by reaction with a leaving group can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (c).
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group before alleviation.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the protecting group can be deprotected after the alkylation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 2
  • the compound of formula IX can be converted to the compound of formula X via reaction of step (d) using Mitsunobu condensation in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with reaction step (c)
  • the compound of formula X can also be prepared by etherifying or alkylating the compound of formula IX with the compound of formula VIII via reaction of step (e) by using suitable base such as potassium carbonate, sodium hydride, triethylainine, pyridine and the like.
  • suitable base such as potassium carbonate, sodium hydride, triethylainine, pyridine and the like.
  • Y include but are not limited to mesyloxy, tosyloxy, chloro, bromo, iodo, and the like. Any conventional conditi hydroxyl group with a halide or leaving group can be utilized to carry out the reaction or step (e).
  • the reaction of step (e) is preferred over step (d) if compound of formula Vll ⁇ is readily available.
  • the compound of formula X can be converted to the compound of formula XII via reaction of step (f) by alkylating the compound of formula X with the compound of formula XI.
  • This reaction can be carried out in the presence of approximately a molar equivalent of a conventional base that converts acetophenone to 3-keto ester (i.e. gamma- keto ester).
  • alkali metal salts of hexamethyldisilane such as lithium bis-(trimethylsilyl)amide and the like.
  • reaction is carried out in inert solvents such as tetrahydrofuran: 1,3- Dimethyl-3.,4.,5,6-tetrahydro-2 (lH)-pyrimidinone.
  • inert solvents such as tetrahydrofuran: 1,3- Dimethyl-3.,4.,5,6-tetrahydro-2 (lH)-pyrimidinone.
  • reaction is carried out at temperatures of from -65 0 C to 25°C. Any of the conditions conventional in such alkylation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (f).
  • the compound of formula XII can be converted to the compound of Il via reaction of step (g) by reducing the ketone group to CH 2 group.
  • the reaction is carried out by heating compound of formula XII with hydrazine hydrate and a base such as KOH or NaOH in suitable solvent such as ethylene glycol. In carrying out this reaction it is generally preferred but not limited to utilize KOH as base. Any of the conditions conventionally used in Wolff-Kish ⁇ er reduction reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (g).
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group before the Mitsunobu condensation or alkylation of the corresponding formula IX.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the protecting group can be deprotected after the Wolff Kishner reduction utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 3
  • R 1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • R 2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • R 3 and R 4 are hydrogen and R 6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
  • the compound of formula XIII can be mesylated to furnish the compound of formula XTV via reaction of step (h). Any conventional conditions to carry out the mesylation reaction of a hydroxyl group can be utilized to carry out the step (h).
  • the compound of formula XTV can be heated with the compound of formula XV to produce the compound of formula XVI. Any of the conditions conventional to produce amino alcohol can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (i).
  • alcohol in the compound of formula XVI, can be displaced by chloro or bromo by treating the compound of formula XVI with thionyl chloride, oxalyl chloride, bromine, phosphorus tribromide and the like to produce the compound of formula XVII. Any conventional method to displace alcohol with chloro or bromo can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (j).
  • the compound of formula XVII can be reacted with the compound of formula IX via reaction of step (k) in the presence of a suitable base such as potassium carbonate, pyridine, sodium hydride, triethylamine and the like.
  • a suitable base such as potassium carbonate, pyridine, sodium hydride, triethylamine and the like.
  • the reaction is carried out in conventional solvents such as dimethylformamide, tetrahydrofuran, dichloromethane and the like to produce the corresponding compound of formula XVlIl.
  • Any conventional method of etherification of a hydroxyl group in the presence of base (preferred base being potassium carbonate) with chloro or bromo can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (k).
  • the compound of formula XVIII can be converted to the compound of formula XIX via reaction of step (1) by alkylating the compound of formula XVIII with the compound of formula XI. This reaction is carried out in the presence of approximately a molar equivalent of a suitable base such as lithium hexamethyldisilane. This reaction is carried out in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (0-
  • the compound of formula XIX can be converted to the compound of II via reaction of step (m) by reducing the ketone group to CH 2 group. This reaction is carried out in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (g).
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • A is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the protecting group can be deprotected after the Wolff- Kishner reduction utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • R 1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • R 2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • R 3 and R 4 are hydrogen and R 6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
  • R 6 is alkyl group having from 1 to 2 carbon atoms.
  • Y is chloro or bromo.
  • the compound of formula XVTT (prepared in the same manner as described hereinbefore in the connection with the reaction of scheme 4 ) can be reacted with the compound of formula VI via reaction of step (n) in the presence of a suitable base such as potassium carbonate, sodium hydride, triethylamine, pyridine and the like.
  • a suitable base such as potassium carbonate, sodium hydride, triethylamine, pyridine and the like.
  • the reaction can be carried out in conventional solvents such as dimethylformamide, tetrahydrofuran, dichloromethane and the like to produce the corresponding compound of formula II.
  • Any conventional conditions of etherification of a hydroxyl group in the presence of base (preferred base being potassium carbonate) with chloro or bromo can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (n).
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective
  • the protecting group can be deprotected after the alleviation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 5
  • R 1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • R is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • R 3 and R 4 together O
  • R 6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
  • the compound of formula X (prepared in the same manner as described hereinbefore in the connection with the reaction of scheme 3) or compound of formula XVIII (prepared in the same manner as described hereinbefore in the connection with the reaction of scheme 4) can be converted to the compound of formula XX or compound of formula XXI via reaction of step (o) by oxidation of keto methyl group with selenium dioxide in the presence of pyridine. Generally the reaction is carried out at temperatures of from 25°O 100 0 C. The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such s evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • the compound of fo ⁇ nula XX or compound of formula XXI can be converted to the compound of formula XXII via reaction of step (p) by esterification of compound of formula XX or compound of formula XXI with methanol or ethanol.
  • the reaction can be carried out either by using catalysts for example H 2 SO 4 , TsOH and the like or by using dehydrating agent for example dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such esterification reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (p).
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the protecting group can be deprotected after esterification utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • R 1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • R 2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms
  • R 3 and R 4 together O
  • R 6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
  • the compound of formula X (prepared in the same manner as described in the reaction of scheme 3) or XVIII (prepared in the same manner as described in the reaction of scheme 4) can be reacted with dialkyl carbonate via reaction of step (q) in the presence of a suitable base such as sodium hydride and the like.
  • the reaction can be carried out in conventional solvents such as N, N'-dimethylformamide, tetrahydrofuran, dichloromethane and the like followed by addition of dialkyl carbonate such as dimethyl or diethyl carbonate to produce the corresponding compound of formula XXIII.
  • Any conditions conventional in such alkylation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (q).
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recryslallization.
  • IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the protecting group can be deprotected after alkylation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 7
  • the compound of formula IX can be converted to the compound of formula X via reaction of step (r) using Mitsunobu condensation in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (c).
  • the compound of formula IX can also be converted to the compound reaction of step (s) in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with tne reaction of step (c).
  • the compound of formula X can be converted to the compound of formula XII via reaction of step (t) in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (f).
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the protecting group can be deprotcctcd after alkylation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the compound of formula XVIII can be converted to the compound of formula XIX via reaction of step (v) in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction step (1).
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective
  • the protecting group can be deprotected after alkylation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • R 6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms.
  • R 7 is H.
  • R 8 is alkyl having 1 to 5 carbon atoms, Y is a halide and P is a protecting group.
  • the compound of formula II can be converted to the compound of formula XXIV via reaction of step (w) by protecting the carbonyl group for example by acyclic or cyclic ketals and the like.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the compound of formula XXIV can be reduced to the compound of formula XXV via reaction step (x) in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (a) in reaction scheme 1.
  • the compound of formula XXV can be converted to the compound of formula XXVI via reaction of step (y) by first deprotecting the protective group.
  • the suitable conditions for the deprotection can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene and then by alkylation with the compound of formula IV. Any conventional method of etherification of a hydroxyl group with a halide can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (y).
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • the compound of formula XXVT is the compound of formula I where R 5 is alkyl having 1 to 5 carbon atoms.
  • IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the protecting group can be deprotected after alkylation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 10
  • reaction of scheme 11 A is described as above.
  • Y is a leaving group.
  • the compound of formula XXVII can be reduced to the compound of formula XXVIII via reaction of step (z).
  • the reaction is carried out utilizing a conventional reducing agent for example alkali metal hydride such as lithium aluminum hydride.
  • the reaction is carried out in a suitable solvent, such as tetrahydrofuran. Any of the conditions conventional in such reduction reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step
  • the compound of formula XXVIII is the compound of formula VII where t is 0 and n is 1.
  • the compound of formula XXVIII can be converted to the compound of formula XXIX by displacing hydroxyl group with a halogen group preferred halogen being bromo or chloro.
  • a halogen group preferred halogen being bromo or chloro.
  • Appropriate halogenating reagents include but are not limited to thionyl chloride, bromine, phosphorous tribromide, carbon tetrabromide and the like. Any conditions conventional in such halogenation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (a').
  • the compound of formula XXIX is the compound of formula VIII where t is 0 and n is 1.
  • the compound of formula XXIX can be converted to the compound of formula XXX by reacting XXIX with an alkali metal cyanide for example sodium or potassium cyanide.
  • the reaction is carried out in a suitable solvent, such as ethanol, dimethyl sulfoxide. Any of the conditions conventionally used in the preparation of nitrile car out the reaction of step (b').
  • the compound of formula XXX can be converted to the compound of formula XXXI via reaction step (c 3 ) by acid or base hydrolysis.
  • acid or base hydrolysis In carrying out this reaction it is generally preferred to utilize basic hydrolysis, for example aqueous sodium hydroxide. Any of the conditions conventionally used in hydrolysis of nitrile can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (c').
  • the compound of formula XXXI can be reduced to give the compound of formula XXXII via reaction of step (d 5 )- This reaction can be carried out in the same manner as described hereinbefore in the reaction of step (z).
  • the compound of formula XXXTI is the compound of formula VII where t is 1 and n is 1.
  • the compound of formula XXXII can be converted to the compound of formula XXXIIl via reaction of step (e') in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (a').
  • the compound of formula XXXIII is the compound of formula VIII where t is 1 and n is 1.
  • the compound of formula XXIX can be reacted with diethyl malonate utilizing a suitable base for example sodium hydride to give compound of formula XXXIV.
  • the reaction is carried out in suitable solvents, such as dimethylformamidc, tctrahydrofuran and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such alkylation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (f ).
  • the compound of formula XXXIV can be hydro lyzed and decarboxylated utilizing sodium hydroxide in suitable solvent, such as ethanol-water to give the compound of formula XXXV. Any of the conditions conventional in such reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (g').
  • the compound of formula XXXV can be converted to the compound of formula XXXVI via reaction of step (h') in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (z).
  • the compound of formula XXXVI is the compound of formula VII where I is 1 and n is 2.
  • the compound of formula XXXVI can be converted to the compoun ⁇
  • XXXVII via reaction of step (i') in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (a').
  • the compound of formula XXXVII is the compound of formula VIII where t is 1 and n is 2.
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group of the compound of formula XXVII.
  • the suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • R 2 , R 3 , R 4 , and R 6 are as above.
  • R 11 is a hydroxy protecting group.
  • Y is a halide.
  • the compound of formula XXXVIII can be converted to the compound of formula XXXIX via reaction of step (j ') by first protecting the hydroxy group by utilizing suitable protecting groups such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene and then by deprotecting the ester group by ester hydrolysis.
  • the compound of formula XXXIX can be reduced to the compound of formula XL by utilizing conventional reducing reagent that converts acid to an alcohol via reaction of step (k').
  • conventional reducing reagent that converts acid to an alcohol via reaction of step (k').
  • this reaction it is generally preferred but not limited to utilize lithium aluminum hydride.
  • the reaction is carried out in a suitable solvent such as tetrahydrofuran and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such reduction reactions can be utilized to carry o ⁇ tt the reaction of step (k').
  • the compound of formula XL can be converted to the compound of formula XLI by displacing hydroxy group with a halogen preferred halogen being bromo or chloro.
  • a halogen preferred halogen being bromo or chloro.
  • Appropriate halogenating reagents include but are not limited to thionyl chloride, bromine, phosphorous tribromide, carbon tetrabromide and the like. Any conditions conventional in such halogenatkra reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (1').
  • the compound of formula XLI can be converted to the compound of formula XLII by reacting XLI with an alkali metal cyanide for example sodium or potassium cyanide.
  • the reaction is carried out in a suitable solvent such as dimethyl sulfoxide. Any of the conditions conventionally used in the preparation of nitriles can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (m').
  • the compound of formula XLII can be converted to the compound of formula XLIII via reaction step (n') by acid or base hydrolysis.
  • acid or base hydrolysis In carrying out this reaction, it is generally preferred to utilize basic hydrolysis, for example aqueous sodium hydroxide. Any of the conditions conventional for the hydrolysis of nitrile can be utilized to reaction of step (n')-
  • the compound of formula XLIII can be converted to the compound of formula XLIV via reaction of step (o ') by removal of hydroxy protecting group utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the compound of formula XLIV can be converted to compound of formula VI where m is 0 and R 6 is an alkyl group having from 1 or 2 carbon atoms by esterification of the compound of formula XLIV with methanol or ethanol.
  • the reaction can be carried out either by using catalysts for example H 2 SO 4 , TsOH and the like or by using dehydrating agent for example dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such esterification reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction.
  • the compound of formula XLI can be reacted with diethyl malonate utilizing a suitable base for example sodium hydride to give compound of formula XLV.
  • the reaction is carried out in suitable solvents, such as dimethylformamide, tetrahydrofuran and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such alkylation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (p').
  • the compound of formula XLV can be hydrolyzed by acid or base and removal of hydroxy protecting group utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene to give compound of formula XLVI via reaction of step (q').
  • the compound of formula XLVI can be converted to the compound of formula VI where m is 1 and R 6 is an alkyl group having from 1 or 2 carbon atoms by esterification of compound of formula XLVI with methanol or ethanol.
  • the reaction can be carried out either by using catalysts for example H 2 SO 4 , TsOH and the like or by using dehydrating agent for example dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such esterification reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction.
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization. Reaction Scheme 12
  • the compound of formula IX can be synthesized according to the method of George M Rubottom et al., J. Org. Chem. 1983, 48, 1550-1552.
  • the compound of formula XLVII can be converted to the compound of formula XXXVi ⁇ via reaction of step (s') by estcrif ⁇ cation of compound of formula XLVII with methanol or ethanol.
  • the reaction can be carried out either by using catalysts for example H 2 SO 4 , TsOH and the like or by using dehydrating agent for example dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such esterif ⁇ cation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of stej can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • R 2 is as above, and R 6 is alkyl group having from 1 to 2 carbon atoms.
  • the compound of formula XLVTII can be converted to the compound of formula XLIX by reducing aldehyde to primary alcohol.
  • the compound of formula XLIX can be converted to the compound of formula L via reaction of step (u') by protecting 1-3 Diols by using 1,1,3,3-Tetraisopropyldisiloxane.
  • the suitable conditions, for this protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the compound of formula L can be converted to the compound of formula LI via reaction of step (v') by protecting phenol group by using benzyl bromide.
  • the suitable conditions for this protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the compound of formula LI can be converted to the compound of formula LTI by deprotection using tetrabutylammonium fluoride via reaction of step (w').
  • the suitable conditions for the deprotection can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the compound of formula LII can be converted to compound of formula LIII via reaction of step (x') by oxidation.
  • Any conventional oxidizing group that converts primary alcohol to an acid for example chromium oxide and the like can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (x').
  • the compound of formula LIII can be converted to the compound of formula LIV by esterif ⁇ cation of compound of formula LIII with methanol or ethanol.
  • the reaction can be carried out either by using catalysts for example H 2 SO 4 , TsOH and the like or by using dehydrating agent for example dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such esterification reactions can be utilize reaction of step (y').
  • the compound of formula LIV can be converted to the compound of formula LV by etherifying or alkylating the compound of formula LIV with methyl halide or ethyl halide or propyl halide by using suitable base for example potassium carbonate, sodium hydride pyridine and the like.
  • suitable base for example potassium carbonate, sodium hydride pyridine and the like.
  • the reaction is carried out in conventional solvents, such as terahydrofuran, dimethylformamide, dichloromethane and the like.
  • the reaction is generally carried out at temperatures of from O 0 C to 40 0 C. Any of the conditions suitable in such alkylation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (z')-
  • the compound of formula LV can be converted to the compound of formula LVI via reaction of step (a") by depro lection of ester and benzyl groups.
  • the suitable deprotecting conditions can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
  • the product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
  • Synthesis can be adapted from J.A.C.S (1974), 96(7), 2121-9 by using ethyl alpha formylvalerate.
  • 3-Propyl ⁇ henol can be methylated to 3-Propylanisole, which was then fo ⁇ nylated to 4-
  • This invention provides a method for treating a mammalian subject with a condition selected from the group consisting of insulin resistance syndrome, diabetes (both primary essential diabetes such as Type I Diabetes or Type II Diabetes and secondary nonessential diabetes) and polycystic ovary syndrome, comprising administering to the subject an amount of a biologically active agent as described herein effective to treat the condition.
  • a symptom of diabetes or the chance of developing a symptom of diabetes such as atherosclerosis, obesity, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, nephropathy, neuropathy, retinopathy, foot ulceration and cataracts, each such symptom being associated with diabetes, can be reduced.
  • This invention also provides a method for treating hyperlipidemia comprising administering to the subject an amount of a biologically active agent as described herein effective to treat the condition.
  • Compounds reduce serum triglycerides and free fatty acids in hyperlipidemic animals.
  • This invention also provides a method for treating cachexia comprising administering to the subject an amount of a biologically active agent as described herein effective to treat the cachexia.
  • This invention also f treating obesity comprising administering to the subject an amount of a biologically active agent as described herein effective to treat the condition.
  • This invention also provides a method for treating a condition selected from atherosclerosis or arteriosclerosis comprising administering to the subject an amount of a biologically active agent as described herein effective to treat the condition.
  • the active agents of this invention are effective to treat hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, cachexia, obesity, atherosclerosis or arteriosclerosis whether or not the subject has diabetes or insulin resistance syndrome.
  • the agent can be administered by any conventional route of systemic administration. Preferably the agent is administered orally. Accordingly, it is preferred for the medicament to be formulated for oral administration.
  • Other routes of administration that can be used in accordance with this invention include rectally, parenterally, by injection (e.g. intravenous, subcutaneous, intramuscular or intraperitioneal injection), or nasally.
  • each of the uses and methods of treatment of this invention comprise administering any one of the embodiments of the biologically active agents described above.
  • each such agent and group of agents is not being repeated, but they are incorporated into this description of uses and methods of treatment as if they were repeated.
  • Insulin resistance syndromes and consequences of chronic hyperglycemia.
  • Dysregulation of fuel metabolism, especially insulin resistance which can occur in the absence of diabetes (persistent hyperglycemia) per se, is associated with a variety of symptoms, including hyperlipidemia, atherosclerosis, obesity, essential hypertension, fatty liver disease (NASH; nonalcoholic steatohepatitis), and, especially in the context of cancer or systemic inflammatory disease, cachexia. Cachexia can also occur in the context of Type I Diabetes or late-stage Type II Diabetes.
  • active agents of the invention are useful for preventing or amelioriating diseases and symptoms associated with insulin resistance.
  • NIDDM Type II diabetes mellitus
  • disease symptoms secondary to hyperglycemia also occur in patients with NIDDM. These include nephropathy, peripheral neuropathy, retinopathy, microvascular disease, ulceration of the extremities, and consequences of nonenzymatic glycosylation of proteins, e.g. damage to collagen and other connective tissues. Attenuation of hyperglycemia reduces the rate of onset and severity of these consequences of diabetes. Because active agents and compositions of the invention help to reduce hyperglycemia in diabetes, they are useful for prevention and amelioration of complications of chronic hyperglycemia.
  • Both human and non-human mammalian subjects can be treated in accordance with the treatment method of this invention.
  • the optimal dose of a particular active agent of the invention for a particular subject can be determined in the clinical setting by a skilled clinician.
  • the agent In the case of oral administration to a human for treatment of disorders related to insulin resistance, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, cachexia or obesity the agent is generally administered in a daily dose of from 1 mg to 400 mg, administered once or twice per day.
  • oral administration to a mouse the agent is generally administered in a daily dose from 1 to 300 mg of the agent per kilogram of body weight.
  • Active agents of the invention are used as monotherapy in diabetes or insulin resistance syndrome, or in combination with one or more other drugs with utility in these types of diseases, e.g.
  • agents of the invention will improve the efficacy of other classes of drugs, permitting lower (and therefore less toxic) doses of such agents to be administered to patients with satisfactory therapeutic results.
  • Type I Diabetes Mellitus A patient with Type I diabetes manages their disease primarily by self-administration of one to several doses of insulin per day, with frequent monitoring blood glucose to permit appropriate adjustment of the dose and timing of insulin administration. Chronic hyperglycemia leads to complications such as nephropathy, neuropathy, retinopathy, foot ulceration, and early mortality; hypoglycemia due to excessive insulin dosing can cause cognitive dysfunction or unconsciousness.
  • a patient with Type I diabetes is treated with 1 to 400 mg/day of an active agent of this invention, in tablet or capsule form either as a single or a divided dose. The anticipated effect will be a reduction in the dose or frequency of administration of insulin required to maintain blood glucose in a satisfactory range, and a reduced incidence and severity of hypoglycemic episodes.
  • a biologically active agent of this invention can be administered in conjunction with islet transplantation to help maintain the anti-diabetic efficacy of the islet transplant.
  • Type II Diabetes Mellitus A typical patient with Type II diabetes (NIDDM) manages their disease by programs of diet and exercise as well as by taking medications such as metformin, glyburide, repaglinide, rosiglitazone, or acarbose, all of which provide some improvement in glycemic control in some patients, but none of which are free of side effects or eventual treatment failure due to disease progression. Islet failure occurs over time in patients with NIDDM, necessitating insulin injections in a large fraction of patients. It is anticipated that daily treatment with an active agent of the invention (with or without additional classes of antidiabetic medication) will improve glycemic control, reduce the rate of islet failure, and reduce the incidence and severity of typical symptoms of diabetes.
  • NIDDM Type II diabetes
  • active agents of the invention will reduce elevated serum triglycerides and fatty acids, thereby reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease, a major cause of death of diabetic patients.
  • dose optimization is done in individual patients according t ⁇ effect, and susceptibility to side effects.
  • Hyperlipidemia Elevated triglyceride and free fatty acid levels in blood affect a substantial fraction of the population and are an important risk factor for atherosclerosis and myocardial infarction. Active agents of the invention are useful for reducing circulating triglycerides and free fatty acids in hyperlipidcmic patients. Hyperlipidemic patients often also have elevated blood cholesterol levels, which also increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. Cholesterol-lowering drugs such as HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors ("statins”) can be administered to hyperlipidemic patients in addition to agents of the invention, optionally incorporated into the same pharmaceutical composition.
  • statins HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors
  • Fatty Liver Disease A substantial fraction of the population is affected by fatty liver disease, also known as nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH); NASH is often associated with obesity and diabetes. Hepatic steatosis, the presence of droplets of triglycerides with hepatocytes, predisposes the liver to chronic inflammation (detected in biopsy samples as infiltration of inflammatory leukocytes), which can lead to fibrosis and cirrhosis.
  • NASH nonalcoholic steatohepatitis
  • Fatty liver disease is generally detected by observation of elevated serum levels of liver-specific enzymes such as the transaminases ALT and AST, which serve as indices of hepatocytc injury, as well as by presentation of symptoms which include fatigue and pain in the region of the liver, though definitive diagnosis often requires a biopsy.
  • liver-specific enzymes such as the transaminases ALT and AST, which serve as indices of hepatocytc injury, as well as by presentation of symptoms which include fatigue and pain in the region of the liver, though definitive diagnosis often requires a biopsy.
  • the anticipated benefit is a reduction in liver inflammation and fat content, resulting in attenuation, halting, or reversal of the progression of NASH toward fibrosis and cirrhosis.
  • compositions comprising a biologically active agent as described herein and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
  • Further embodiments of the pharmaceutical composition of this invention comprise any one of the embodiments of the biologically active agents described above. In the interest of avoiding unnecessary redundancy, each such agent and group of agents is not being repeated, but they are incorporated into this description of pharmaceutical compositions as if they were repeated.
  • the composition is adapted for oral administration, e.g. in coated tablet, dragee, hard or soft gelatin capsule, solution, emulsion or suspension.
  • the oral composition will comprise from 1 mg to 400 mg of such agent. It is convenient tor the subject to swallow one or two tablets, coated tablets, dragees, or gelatin capsules per day.
  • the composition can also be adapted for administration by any other conventional means of systemic administration including rectally, e.g. in the form of suppositories, parenterally, e.g. in the form of injection solutions, or nasally.
  • the biologically active compounds can be processed with pharmaceutically inert, inorganic or organic carriers for the production of pharmaceutical compositions.
  • Lactose, corn starch or derivatives thereof, talc, stearic acid or its salts and the like can be used, for example, as such carriers for tablets, coated tablets, dragees and hard gelatin capsules.
  • Suitable carriers for soft gelatin capsules are, for example, vegetable oils, waxes, fats, semi-solid and liquid polyols and the like. Depending on the nature of the active ingredient no carriers are, however, usually required in the case of soft gelatin capsules, other than the soft gelatin itself.
  • Suitable carriers for the production of solutions and syrups are, for example, water, polyols, glycerol, vegetable oils and the like.
  • Suitable carriers for suppositories are, for example, natural or hardened oils, waxes, fats, semil- liquid or liquid polyols and the like.
  • compositions can, moreover, contain preservatives, solubilizers, stabilizers, wetting agents, emulsif ⁇ ers, sweeteners, colorants, flavorants, salts for varying the osmotic pressure, buffers, coating agents or antioxidants. They can also contain still other therapeutically valuable substances, particularly antidiabetic or hypolipidemic agents that act through mechanisms other than those underlying the effects of the compounds of the invention.
  • Agents which can advantageously be combined with compounds of the invention in a single formulation include but are not limited to biguanides such as metformin, insulin releasing agents such as the sulfonylurea insulin releaser glyburide and other sulfonylurea insulin releasers, cholesterol-lowering drugs such as the "statin" HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors such as atrovastatin, lovastatin , pravastatin and simvastatin, PPAR-alpha agonists such as clofibrate and gemfibrozil, PPAR-gamma agonists such as Ihiazolidinediones (e.g.
  • rosiglitazone and pioglitazone alpha-glucosidase inhibitors such as acarbose (which inhibit starch digestion), and prandial insulin releasers such as repaglinide.
  • alpha-glucosidase inhibitors such as acarbose (which inhibit starch digestion)
  • prandial insulin releasers such as repaglinide.
  • Streptozotocin is a toxin that selectively destroys insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells, and is widely used to induce insulin-dependent diabetes in experimental animals.
  • mice Female Balb/C mice (8 weeks old; 18-20 grams body weight) are treated with streptozotocin (STZ) (50 mg/kg i.p. on each of five consecutive days). Fourteen days after the last dose of STZ, blood glucose is measured to verify that the animals are diabetic, and the mice are divided into two groups of 5 animals each, one group receiving a compound of the invention (250 mg/kg) daily by oral gavagc, and the other receiving vehicle (0.75% hydroxypropylmethylcellulose, a suspending agent, in water). A group of nondiabetic mice from the same cohort that did not receive STZ is also monitored. Blood samples are taken periodically for determination of blood glucose concentrations, and body weights are also recorded.
  • STZ streptozotocin
  • mice treated orally with the compound of the invention and in vehicle-treated control animals are measured.
  • a blood glucose concentration beginning to decrease toward baseline is considered a positive result, whereas blood glucose in the vehicle-treated control animals is expected to continue to rise.
  • Body weights and blood glucose, triglyceride and cholesterol concentrations 14 weeks after the beginning of drug treatment are measured.
  • EXAMPLE B Improved survival of mice with lethal insulin-depenc
  • mice Female Balb/C mice (14 weeks old) are treated with a single dose of streptozotocin (175 mg/kg i.p.) to induce severe insulin-dependent diabetes. Seven days later, mice are divided into three treatment groups: A compound of the invention, pioglitazone, and vehicle. Mice are treated daily via oral gavage, and survival is monitored over time.
  • mice Female balb/C mice (19 wks of age at start of experiment) are challenged with multiple high doses of STZ (75 mg/kg i.p. on 5 consecutive days). Animals are then divided in two groups (20 mice / group) matched for severity of diabetes. Four days after the last dose of STZ, treatments are initiated. One group receives Vehicle (0.4 ml of 0.75% HPMC, p.o.), and the other group receives a compound of the invention orally (30 mg/kg/day ). After three weeks of daily treatment, cumulative mortality in the two groups is recorded.
  • STZ 75 mg/kg i.p. on 5 consecutive days. Four days after the last dose of STZ, treatments are initiated. One group receives Vehicle (0.4 ml of 0.75% HPMC, p.o.), and the other group receives a compound of the invention orally (30 mg/kg/day ). After three weeks of daily treatment, cumulative mortality in the two groups is recorded.
  • NOD non-obese diabetic mice develop insulin-dependent diabetes as a consequence of spontaneous autoimmune destruction of pancreatic islet cells.
  • HPMC hydroxypropyl methylcellulose in water
  • a compound of the invention 200 mg/kg/day
  • Ob/ob mice have a defect in the gene for lcptin, a protein involved in appetite regulation and energy metabolism, and are hyperphagic, obese, and insulin resistant. They develop hyperglycemia and fatty liver.
  • Male lean (ob/+ heterozygote) and obese (ob/ob homozygote) C57B1 approximately 8 weeks of age arc obtained from Jackson Labs (Bar Harbor, ME) and randomly assigned into groups of 5 animals such that body weights and blood glucose concentrations are similar between groups. All animals are maintained under the control of temperature (23 C), relative humidity (50 ⁇ 5 %) and light (7:00 - 19:00), and allowed free access to water and laboratory chow (Formulab Diet 5008, Quality Lab Products, Elkridge, MD).
  • Blood glucose is routinely determined with glucose test strips and a Glucometer Elite XL device (Bayer Corporation). At selected time points, blood samples ( ⁇ 100 microliters) are obtained with a heparinized capillary tube via the retro-orbital sinus for serum chemistry analysis. Serum chemistry (glucose, triglycerides, cholesterol, BUN, creatinine, AST, ALT, SDH, CPK and free fatty acids) analyses are performed on a Hitachi 717 Analyzer, and plasma insulin and pancreatic insulin are measured by an electrochemiluminescent immunoassay (Origen Analyzer, Igen, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD).
  • Serum chemistry glucose, triglycerides, cholesterol, BUN, creatinine, AST, ALT, SDH, CPK and free fatty acids
  • Groups of ob/ob mice are divided into treatment cohorts as indicated below, and given daily oral doses of a compound of the invention (10, 30, 100, 150 or 300 mg), rosiglitazone (1, 3, 10 or 30 mg), or pioglitazone (30 or 100 mg).
  • a compound of the invention 10, 30, 100, 150 or 300 mg
  • rosiglitazone 1, 3, 10 or 30 mg
  • pioglitazone 30 or 100 mg.
  • the dose ranges of compounds in this experiment is chosen to include both suboptimal and potentially supraoptimal doses.
  • Ob/ob mice develop chronic inflammatory fatty liver disease and are considered to be an animal model for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), a condition which can lead toward progressive cirrhosis and liver dysfunction.
  • NASH nonalcoholic steatohepatitis
  • fat accumulation increases the susceptibility of the liver to inflammatory injury.
  • One characeristic sign of NASH in patients is, in the absence of viral infection or alcoholism, elevated levels in serum of enzymes that are released from damaged hepatocytes, e.g. alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), and sorbitol dehydrogenase (SDH). These enzymes are elevated in ob/ob mice as a consequence of fatty liver and secondary inflammation.
  • EXAMPLE F Acute hypoglycemic effects of compounds of the invi mice: Experiment 1.
  • Compounds of the invention display acute antihyperglycemic activity in animals with non insulin-dependent diabetes.
  • mice Male ob/ob diabetic mice are randomized into groups of five animals each. Body weights arc about 50 —55 g and blood glucose is approximately 300 mg/dL in the fed state.
  • a single oral dose of a test substance suspended in 0.5% carboxymethylcellulosc vehicle is administered by gavage. Blood glucose is measured in blood droplets obtained by nicking a tail vein with a razor using glucometer test strips and a Glucometer Elite XL device (Bayer) at 0, 0.5, 2, 4, 6 and 18 hours after the initial dosing. A 10% reduction in blood glucose versus oral vehicle is considered a positive screening result. Blood glucose reductions are generally expected to be maximal at 6 hours after drug administration.
  • EXAMPLE G Acute hypoglycemic effects of compounds of the invention in diabetic mice: Expt 2
  • Compounds of the invention display acute antihyperglycemic activity in animals with noninsulin-dependent diabetes.
  • mice Male ob/ob mice (50-55 grams; blood glucose ⁇ 300 mg/dL) are divided into groups of five animals each, and given a single oral dose of test drug (250 mg/kg) suspended in 0.5% carboxymethylcellulose vehicle; a control group received oral vehicle alone. Six hours after oral administration of test drugs or vehicle (control), blood samples are obtained from a tail vein and glucose content is determined with a glucometer.
  • EXAMPLE H Antidiabetic effects of compounds of the invention in db/db mice
  • Db/db mice have a defect in leptin signaling, leading to hyperphagia, obesity and diabetes. Moreover, unlike ob/ob mice which have relatively robust islets, their insulin- producing pancreatic islet cells undergo failure during chronic hyperglycemia, so that they transition from hyperinsulinemia (associated with peripheral insulin resistance) to hypoinsulinemic diabetes.
  • Male db/db mice are given daily oral treatments with vehicle (0.75% hydroxypropylmethylcellulose), a compound of the invention (150 mg/kg), or pioglitazone (100 mg/kg). Blood samples are obtained via the retro-orbital sinus for serum chemistry analysis, or via the tail vein for glucose measurement with a test strip and glucometer. The dose of pioglitazone used in this experiment was reported in the literature to be a maximally-effective dose for treatment of db/db mice (Shimaya et al. (2000), Metabolism 49:411-7).
  • antidiabetic activity of a compound of the invention is compared with that of rosiglitazone (20 mg/kg).
  • blood glucose and triglycerides are measured, significantly lower in animals treated with either Compound BI or rosiglitazone, compared to vehicle-treated controls.
  • the rosiglitazone dose used in this study was reported in published literature as the optimum dose for late stage db/db mice (Lenhard et al., (1999) Diabetologia 42:545- 54). Groups consist of 6-8 mice each.
  • EXAMPLE I Antidiabetic effects of compounds of the invention in db/db mice.
  • db/db mice have a defect in leptin signaling, leading to hyperphagia, obesity and diabetes. Moreover, unlike ob/ob mice on a C57BL/6J background, db/db mice on a C57BL/KS background undergo failure of their insulin-producing pancreatic islet ⁇ cells, resulting in progression from hyperinsulinemia (associated with peripheral insulin resistance) to hypoinsulinemic diabetes.
  • mice Male obese (db/db homozygote) C57BL/Ksola mice approximately 8 weeks of age, are obtained from Jackson Labs (Bar Harbor, ME) and randomly assigned into groups of 5 - 7 animals such that the body weights (50 -55 g) and serum glucose levels (>300 mg/dl in fed state) are similar between groups; male lean (db/+ heterozygote) mice serve as cohort controls. A minimum of 7 days is allowed for adaptation after arrival. All animals are maintained under controlled temperature (23 0 C), relative humidity (50 ⁇ 5 %) and light (7:00 — 19:00), and allowed free access to standard chow (Formulab Diet 5008, Quality Lab Products, Elkridge, MD) and water.
  • Treatment cohorts are given daily oral doses of (1% hydroxypropyl ⁇ compound of the invention (100 mg/kg) for 2 weeks. At the end of the treatment period 100 ⁇ l of venous blood is withdrawn in a heparinized capillary tube from the retro-orbital sinus of db/db mice for serum chemistry analysis.
  • Cataracts are one of the leading causes of progressive vision decline and blindness associated with ageing and diabetes, and the Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) model has many similarities with human cataractogenesis, including biochemical changes and oxidative stress in the lens. These rats, however, undergo cataractogenesis typically between 14 —16 weeks of age.
  • Body weights and blood glucose are routinely determined (once a week, usually around 10:00 A.M.) from tail bleeds with glucose test strips and a Glucometer Elite XL device (Bayer Corporation).
  • 100 ⁇ l of venous blood is collected (usually 10:00 A.M.) in a heparinized tube from the tail vein for serum chemistry analysis (Anilytics, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD).
  • Serum chemistry (glucose (GL), triglycerides (TG), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), sorbitol dehydrogenase (SDH), and free fatty acids
  • FFA Fluorescence Activated Factor Analysis
  • HCA Hitachi 717 Analyzer
  • Plasma insulin is measured by an electrochemiluminescent immunoassay, ECL (Origen Analyzer, Igen, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD).
  • ECL electrochemiluminescent immunoassay
  • the animals arc sacrificed and tissues and/or organs (lens and liver) are extirpated, weighed (wet weight) and processed for biochemical analyses.
  • Malondialdehyde (MDA) a major product of assayed in lenses according to Ohkawa et al (1979), Analytical Biochem y ⁇ , 3 ⁇ 1-358).
  • EXAMPLE K Lowering of circulating triglycerides, free fatty acids, insulin and leptin in high fat-fed C57B1/6J mice
  • the high fat-fed mouse is a model for the hypertriglyceridemia and high circulating fatty acid levels, and the insulin and leptin resistance that are found in people at risk for and with obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and other disorders.
  • Male C57B1/6J mice approximately 8 weeks of age, are randomly assigned into groups of 6 animals. They are maintained under controlled temperature (23 0 C), relative humidity (50 + 5 %) and light (7:00 — 19:00), and allowed free access to food and water ad libitum. Mice are fed a high- fat diet (diet number D12451, containing 45% of calories as fat (Research Diets, New Brunswick, NJ)) for 6 weeks.
  • mice received either vehicle (hydroxymethylcellulose), a compound of the invention (10 mg/kg, 30 mg/kg, or 100 mg/kg) Wyl4,643 (10 nig/kg, 30 mg/kg, or 100 mg/kg) or rosiglitazone (lmg/kg, 3 mg/kg, 10 mg/kg, or 100 mg/kg) by oral gavage for an additional 4 weeks while continuing on the high-fat diet.
  • Plasma chemistries (Anilytics, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD) are assayed after 2 weeks of drug treatments. Plasma serum insulin and leptin are measured by an electrochemiluminescent immunoassay (Origcn Analyzer, Igen, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD) after 4 weeks of drug treatments.
  • EXAMPLE L Lowering of circulating triglycerides, free fatty acids, insulin and leptin in high fat-fed Sprague Dawley rats
  • the high fat-fed rat is a model for insulin and leptin resistance.
  • Sprague-Dawley rats have an intact leptin system and respond to a high fat diet with hyperinsulinemia due to a downregulation of the normal insulin response in peripheral tissues such as liver, adipose tissue and muscle
  • mice Male Sprague-Dawley rats, approximately 17 weeks of age, are obtained from Jackson Labs (Bar Harbor, ME) and randomly assigned into groups of 5 - 7 animals; the body weights are similar between groups. All animals are maintained in a tempcraturc- controlled (25°C) facility with a strict 12 h light/dark cycle and are g water and food. Rats are fed a high-fat diet (diet number D 12451 (containing ⁇ 4O y 0 or calories as fat), Research Diets, New Brunswick, NJ) for one month prior to drug treatment.
  • Diet number D 12451 containing ⁇ 4O y 0 or calories as fat
  • Sprague-Dawley rats are treated with a single daily dose of vehicle (hydroxymethylcelhilose), a compound of the invention (10, 30 andlOO mg/kg), or rosiglitazone (3 mg/kg) for 6 weeks while maintaining the high-fat diet.
  • Vehicle hydroxymethylcelhilose
  • a compound of the invention 10, 30 andlOO mg/kg
  • rosiglitazone 3 mg/kg

Abstract

Agents useful for the treatment of various metabolic disorders, such as insulin resistance syndrome, diabetes, polycystic ovary syndrome, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, cachexia, obesity, atherosclerosis and arteriosclerosis are disclosed. wherein n is 1 or 2; m is 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4; q is 0 or 1 ; t is 0 or 1 ; R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms; R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, or alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms; one of R3 and R4 is hydrogen or hydroxy and the other is hydrogen; or R3 and R4 together are =O; R5 is hydrogen or alkyl having one, two, three, four or five carbon atoms; A is phenyl, unsubstituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfluoromethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and perfluoromethoxy; or cycloalkyl having from 3 to 6 ring carbon atoms wherein the cycloalkyl is unsubstituted or one or two ring carbons are independently mono-substituted by methyl or ethyl; or a 5 or 6 membered heteroaromatic ring having 1 or 2 ring heteroatoms selected from N, S and O and the heteroaromatic ring is covalently bound to the remainder of the compound of formula I by a ring carbon. Alternatively, the. agent can be a pharmaceutically acceptable salt of the compound of Formula I.

Description

COMPOUNDS FOR THE TREATMENT OF METABOLIC DISORDERS
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Diabetes mellitus is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Chronically elevated blood glucose leads to debilitating complications: nephropathy, often necessitating dialysis or renal transplant; peripheral neuropathy; retinopathy leading to blindness; ulceration of the legs and feet, leading to amputation; fatty liver disease, sometimes progressing to cirrhosis; and vulnerability to coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction.
There are two primary types of diabetes. Type I, or insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (IDDM) is due to autoimmune destruction of insulin-producing beta cells in the pancreatic islets. The onset of this disease is usually in childhood or adolescence. Treatment consists primarily of multiple daily injections of insulin, combined with frequent testing of blood glucose levels to guide adjustment of insulin doses, because excess insulin can cause hypoglycemia and consequent impairment of brain and other functions.
Type II, or noninsulin-dependent diabetes mellitus (NIDDM) typically develops in adulthood. NIDDM is associated with resistance of glucose-utilizing tissues like adipose tissue, muscle, and liver, to the actions of insulin. Initially, the pancreatic islet beta cells compensate by secreting excess insulin. Eventual islet failure results in decompensation and chronic hyperglycemia. Conversely, moderate islet insufficiency can precede or coincide with peripheral insulin resistance. There are several classes of drugs that are useful for treatment of NlDDM: 1) insulin rclcasers, which directly stimulate insulin release, carrying the risk of hypoglycemia; 2) prandial insulin releasers, which potentiate glucose-induced insulin secretion, and must be taken before each meal; 3) biguanides, including metformin, which attenuate hepatic gluconeogenesis (which is paradoxically elevated in diabetes); 4) insulin sensitizers, for example the thiazolidinedione derivatives rosiglitazone and piogiitazone, which improve peripheral responsiveness to insulin, but which have side effects like weight gain, edema, and occasional liver toxicity; 5) insulin injections, which are often necessary in the later stages of NIDDM wl failed under chronic hyperstimulation.
Insulin resistance can also occur without marked hyperglycemia, and is generally associated with atherosclerosis, obesity, hyperlipidemia, and essential hypertension. This cluster of abnormalities constitutes the "metabolic syndrome" or "insulin resistance syndrome". Insulin resistance is also associated with fatty liver, which can progress to chronic inflammation (NASH; "nonalcoholic steatohepatitis"), fibrosis, and cirrhosis. Cumulatively, insulin resistance syndromes, including but not limited to diabetes, underlie many of the major causes of morbidity and death of people over age 40.
Despite the existence of such drugs, diabetes remains a major and growing public health problem. Late stage complications of diabetes consume a large proportion of national health care resources. There is a need for new orally active therapeutic agents which effectively address the primary defects of insulin resistance and islet failure with fewer or milder side effects than existing drugs.
Currently there are no safe and effective treatments for fatty liver disease. Therefore such a treatment would be of value in treating this condition.
Certain compounds having a carboxylic acid or carboxylic acid ester moiety in place of an alcohol or ether moiety at the terminus of the compound can be found in WO 04/091486, WO 04/073611, and WO 02/100341 (all assigned to Wellstat Therapeutics Corp.). The aforementioned publications do not disclose any compounds within the scope of Formula I shown below.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
This invention provides a biologically active agent as described below. This invention provides the use of the biologically active agent described below in the manufacture of a medicament for the treatment of insulin resistance syndrome, diabetes, cachexia, hyperlipidemia, fatly liver disease, obesity, atherosclerosis or arteriosclerosis. This invention provides methods of treating a mammalian subject with insulin resistance syndrome, diabetes, cachexia, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, obesity, atherosclerosis or arteriosclerosis comprising administering to the subject an effecti\ biologically active agent described below. This invention provides a pnarmaceuticai composition comprising the biologically active agent described below and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier.
The biologically active agent in accordance with this invention is a compound of Formula I:
Figure imgf000004_0001
wherein n is 1 or 2; m is 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4; q is 0 or 1; tis 0 or 1; R1 is alkyl having from 1 to
3 carbon atoms; R >2 is hydrogen, halo, alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, or alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms;one of R3 and R4 is hydrogen or hydroxy and the other is hydrogen; or R3 and R4 together are ==O; R5 is hydrogen or alkyl having one, two, three, four or five carbon atoms; A is phenyl, unsubstituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfluorotnethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and perfluoromethoxy; or cycloalkyl having from 3 to 6 ring carbon atoms wherein the cycloalkyl is unsubstituted or one or two ring carbons are ndependently mono-substituted by methyl or ethyl; or a 5 or 6 membered heteroaromatic ring having 1 or 2 ring heteroatoms selected from N, S and O and the heteroaromatic ring is covalently bound to the remainder of the compound of formula I by a ring carbon.
Alternatively, the biologically active agent can be a pharmaceutically acceptable salt of the compound of Formula I.
It is believed that the biologically active agents of this invention will have activity in one or more of the biological activity assays described below, which are established animal models of human diabetes and insulin resistance syndrome. Therefore such agents would be useful in the treatment of diabetes and insulin resistance syndrome. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
DEFINITIONS
As used herein the term "alkyl" means a linear or branched-chain alkyl group. An alkyl group identified as having a certain number of carbon atoms means any alkyl group having the specified number of carbons. For example, an alkyl having three carbon atoms can be propyl or isopropyl; and alkyl having four carbon atoms can be n-butyl, 1 - methylpropyl, 2-methylpropyl or t-butyl.
As used herein the term "halo" refers to one or more of fluoro, chloro, bromo, and iodo.
As used herein the term "perfluoro" as in perfluoromethyl or perfluoromelhoxy, means that the group in question has fluorine atoms in place of all of the hydrogen atoms.
As used herein "Ac" refers to the group CHsC(O)- .
Certain chemical compounds are referred to herein by their chemical name or by the two- letter code shown below. Compounds CY, CZ and DA are included within the scope of Formula I shown above.
CY 4-(3-(2,6-Dimethylbcnzyloxy)phcnyl)-butan-l-ol :
Figure imgf000005_0001
CZ 4-(3-(2,6-Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-4-hydroxybutan-l-ol :
Figure imgf000006_0001
DA l-(3-(2,6-Dimemylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-4-hydroxybutan-l-one
Figure imgf000006_0002
As used herein the transitional term "comprising" is open-ended. A claim utilizing this term can contain elements in addition to those recited in such claim.
COMPOUNDS OF THE INVENTION
The asterisk in the depiction of Formula I above indicates a possible chiral center, and that carbon is chiral when one of R3 and R4 is hydroxy and the other is hydrogen. In such cases, this invention provides the racemate, the (R) enantiomer, and the (S) enantiomer, of the compounds of Formula I, all of which are believed to be active. Mixtures of these enantiomers can be separated by using HPLC, for example as described in Chirality 11:420-425 (1999).
In an embodiment of the agent, use, method or pharmaceutical composition described in the Summary above m is 0, 2, or 4. In an embodiment of the agent, use, method or pharmaceutical compc the Summary above, n is 1; q is 0; t is 0; R2 is hydrogen; R5 is hydrogen; and A is phenyl, unsubslituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfluoromethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and perfluoromethoxy. In an embodiment of this invention Λ is 2,6-dimethylphenyl. Examples of such compounds include Compounds CY, CZ and DA.
In an embodiment of the biologically active agent of this invention, the agent is in substantially (at least 98%) pure form.
REACTION SCHEMES
The biologically active agents of the present invention can be made in accordance with the following reaction schemes.
The compound of formula I where m is 0 to 4, q is 0 or 1 , t is 0 or 1 , and n is 1 or 2, R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, one of R3 and R4 is hydrogen or hydroxy and the other is hydrogen and R5 is hydrogen or alkyl having 1 to 5 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000007_0001
0) wherein A is described as above, can be prepared via reaction of scheme 1.
In the reaction of scheme 1 , A, t, m, n, q, R1 , and R2are as above. R3 and R4 are hydrogen or together are =O. R6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms. R7 is H. R8 is alkyl having 1 to 5 carbon atoms and Y is a halide. The compound of formula II can be converted to the compound of foi reaction of step (a) by reducing the ester group to the alcohol. This reaction is carried out utilizing a conventional reducing agent, which converts ester to alcohol. In carrying out this reaction it is generally preferred to utilize an alkali metal hydride such as lithium aluminium hydride as the reducing agent. When R3 and R4 together are =O, it is necessary to utilize two equivalents of the reducing agent. Any of the conditions conventional in such reduction reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (a). The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization. The compound of formula III is the compound of formula I where R5 is H.
The compound of formula III can be converted to the compound of formula V where R5 is alkyl having one to five carbon atoms by alkylating the compound of formula III with the compound of formula IV. Any conventional method of etherification of a hydroxyl group with a halide in the presence of a suitable base such as potassium carbonate, sodium hydride, triethylamine, pyridine and the like, can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (b). The reaction can be carried out in conventional solvents such as dimethylformamide, tetrahydrofuran, dichloromethane and the like. The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization. The compound of formula V is the compound of formula I where R5 is alkyl having 1 to 5 carbon atoms.
If A is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group during the reduction of the corresponding formula II to formula III. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. The protecting group can be deprotected after the alleviation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 1
Figure imgf000009_0001
(II)
(a)
Figure imgf000009_0002
The compound of formula II where m is 0 to 1 , q is 0, t is 0 or 1 , and n is 1 or 2, R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R3 and R4 are hydrogen and R6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000010_0001
(ID
wherein Λ is described as above, can be prepared via reaction of scheme 2.
In the reaction of scheme 2, A, t, m, n, R2, R3, and R4 are as above. R6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, and Y is a leaving group.
The compound of formula VI can be converted to the compound of formula II via reaction of step (c) using Mitsunobu condensation of VI with VII using triphenylphosphine and diethyl azodicarboxylate or diisopropyl azodicarboxylate. The reaction is carried out in a suitable solvent for example tetrahydrofuran. Any of the conditions conventionally used in Mitsunobu reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (c).
The compound of formula II can also be prepared by etherifying or alkylating the compound of formula VI with the compound of formula VIII as in reaction of step (c). In the compound of formula VIII, Y, include but are not limited to mesyloxy, tosyloxy, chloro, bromo, iodo, and the like. Any conventional method of etherifying of a hydroxyl group by reaction with a leaving group can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (c). The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group before alleviation. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. The protecting group can be deprotected after the alkylation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 2
Figure imgf000011_0001
The compound of formula II where m is 2 to 4, q is 0, t is 0 or 1 , and n is 1 or 2, R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R3 and R4 are hydrogen and R6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, Le. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000011_0002
(II)
wherein A is described as above, can be prepared via reaction of scheme 3.
In the reaction of scheme 3, A, t, n, m, R2, R3, R4 and R6 are as above. R9 and R10 together are =O. Y is a leaving group and p is 1 to 3.
The compound of formula IX can be converted to the compound of formula X via reaction of step (d) using Mitsunobu condensation in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with reaction step (c)
The compound of formula X can also be prepared by etherifying or alkylating the compound of formula IX with the compound of formula VIII via reaction of step (e) by using suitable base such as potassium carbonate, sodium hydride, triethylainine, pyridine and the like. In the compound of formula VIII, Y, include but are not limited to mesyloxy, tosyloxy, chloro, bromo, iodo, and the like. Any conventional conditi hydroxyl group with a halide or leaving group can be utilized to carry out the reaction or step (e). The reaction of step (e) is preferred over step (d) if compound of formula Vllϊ is readily available.
The compound of formula X can be converted to the compound of formula XII via reaction of step (f) by alkylating the compound of formula X with the compound of formula XI. This reaction can be carried out in the presence of approximately a molar equivalent of a conventional base that converts acetophenone to 3-keto ester (i.e. gamma- keto ester). In carrying out this reaction it is generally preferred but not limited to utilize alkali metal salts of hexamethyldisilane such as lithium bis-(trimethylsilyl)amide and the like. Generally this reaction is carried out in inert solvents such as tetrahydrofuran: 1,3- Dimethyl-3.,4.,5,6-tetrahydro-2 (lH)-pyrimidinone. Generally the reaction is carried out at temperatures of from -650C to 25°C. Any of the conditions conventional in such alkylation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (f).
The compound of formula XII can be converted to the compound of Il via reaction of step (g) by reducing the ketone group to CH2 group. The reaction is carried out by heating compound of formula XII with hydrazine hydrate and a base such as KOH or NaOH in suitable solvent such as ethylene glycol. In carrying out this reaction it is generally preferred but not limited to utilize KOH as base. Any of the conditions conventionally used in Wolff-Kishπer reduction reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (g). The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group before the Mitsunobu condensation or alkylation of the corresponding formula IX. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. The protecting group can be deprotected after the Wolff Kishner reduction utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 3
Figure imgf000013_0001
(e) A(CH2)^n-Y OD Br-(CH2)p-CO2Re (VIII) (XI)
Figure imgf000013_0002
(X) (xπ)
(g) KOH/NH2NH2
Figure imgf000013_0003
(ID
The compound of formula II where m is 2 to 4, q is 1, t is 0 or 1, and n is 1 or 2, R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R3 and R4 are hydrogen and R6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000014_0001
(ID
wherein A is described as above, can be prepared via reaction of scheme 4.
In the reaction of scheme 4, A, t, n, m, q, R1, R2, R3, R4 and R6 are as above. R9 and R10 together are =O. Y is chloro or bromo and p is 1 to 3.
The compound of formula XIII can be mesylated to furnish the compound of formula XTV via reaction of step (h). Any conventional conditions to carry out the mesylation reaction of a hydroxyl group can be utilized to carry out the step (h). The compound of formula XTV can be heated with the compound of formula XV to produce the compound of formula XVI. Any of the conditions conventional to produce amino alcohol can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (i).
In the compound of formula XVI, alcohol can be displaced by chloro or bromo by treating the compound of formula XVI with thionyl chloride, oxalyl chloride, bromine, phosphorus tribromide and the like to produce the compound of formula XVII. Any conventional method to displace alcohol with chloro or bromo can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (j).
The compound of formula XVII can be reacted with the compound of formula IX via reaction of step (k) in the presence of a suitable base such as potassium carbonate, pyridine, sodium hydride, triethylamine and the like. The reaction is carried out in conventional solvents such as dimethylformamide, tetrahydrofuran, dichloromethane and the like to produce the corresponding compound of formula XVlIl. Any conventional method of etherification of a hydroxyl group in the presence of base (preferred base being potassium carbonate) with chloro or bromo can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (k). The compound of formula XVIII can be converted to the compound of formula XIX via reaction of step (1) by alkylating the compound of formula XVIII with the compound of formula XI. This reaction is carried out in the presence of approximately a molar equivalent of a suitable base such as lithium hexamethyldisilane. This reaction is carried out in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (0-
The compound of formula XIX can be converted to the compound of II via reaction of step (m) by reducing the ketone group to CH2 group. This reaction is carried out in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (g). The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
If A is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. The protecting group can be deprotected after the Wolff- Kishner reduction utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
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Reaction Scheme 4
GO (i)
A(CH2VOH A(CH2X-OMs A(CH; L)t-(N)q qH-(CH2)n-OH
(xm) (XIV) R'-NH-(CH2)n-OH (XVI) (XV)
0")
n-Y
Figure imgf000016_0001
(XDO
(m) KOHTNH3NH2
Figure imgf000016_0002
(π)
The compound of formula II where m is 0 to 1 , q is 1 , t is 0 or 1 , and n is 1 or 2, R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R3 and R4 are hydrogen and R6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000017_0001
(π)
wherein A is described as above, can be prepared via reaction of scheme 5.
In the reaction of scheme 5, A, t, n, m, q, R1, R2, R3, and R4 are as above. R6 is alkyl group having from 1 to 2 carbon atoms. Y is chloro or bromo.
The compound of formula XVTT (prepared in the same manner as described hereinbefore in the connection with the reaction of scheme 4 ) can be reacted with the compound of formula VI via reaction of step (n) in the presence of a suitable base such as potassium carbonate, sodium hydride, triethylamine, pyridine and the like. The reaction can be carried out in conventional solvents such as dimethylformamide, tetrahydrofuran, dichloromethane and the like to produce the corresponding compound of formula II. Any conventional conditions of etherification of a hydroxyl group in the presence of base (preferred base being potassium carbonate) with chloro or bromo can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (n). The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective
Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. The protecting group can be deprotected after the alleviation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 5
A(CH2 ))ir-((KW)q-((CH2)n-Y
Figure imgf000018_0001
The compound of formula II where m is 0, q is 0 or 1, t is 0 or 1, and n is 1 or 2, R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R3 and R4 together are =O and R6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000018_0002
(H)
wherein A is described as above, can be prepared via reaction of scheme 6.
In the reaction of scheme 6, A, t, n, q, R1, R2 and R6 are as above. R9 and R10 together are =O.
The compound of formula X (prepared in the same manner as described hereinbefore in the connection with the reaction of scheme 3) or compound of formula XVIII (prepared in the same manner as described hereinbefore in the connection with the reaction of scheme 4) can be converted to the compound of formula XX or compound of formula XXI via reaction of step (o) by oxidation of keto methyl group with selenium dioxide in the presence of pyridine. Generally the reaction is carried out at temperatures of from 25°O 1000C. The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such s evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
The compound of foπnula XX or compound of formula XXI can be converted to the compound of formula XXII via reaction of step (p) by esterification of compound of formula XX or compound of formula XXI with methanol or ethanol. The reaction can be carried out either by using catalysts for example H2SO4, TsOH and the like or by using dehydrating agent for example dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such esterification reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (p). The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
The compound of formula XXII is the compound of formula II where R3=R9 and R4=R10 together are =O.
IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. The protecting group can be deprotected after esterification utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
Reaction Scheme 6
Figure imgf000019_0001
(X) or (XVIII) (XX) or (XXI) (XXII)
The compound of formula II where m is 1, q is 0 or 1, t is 0 or 1, and n is 1 or 2, R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R3 and R4 together are =O and R6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000020_0001
(H)
wherein A is described as above, can. be prepared via reaction of scheme 7.
In the reaction of scheme 1, A, t, m, n, q, R1, R2 and R6 are as above. R9 and R10 together are =O.
The compound of formula X (prepared in the same manner as described in the reaction of scheme 3) or XVIII (prepared in the same manner as described in the reaction of scheme 4) can be reacted with dialkyl carbonate via reaction of step (q) in the presence of a suitable base such as sodium hydride and the like. The reaction can be carried out in conventional solvents such as N, N'-dimethylformamide, tetrahydrofuran, dichloromethane and the like followed by addition of dialkyl carbonate such as dimethyl or diethyl carbonate to produce the corresponding compound of formula XXIII. Any conditions conventional in such alkylation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (q). The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recryslallization.
The compound of formula XXIII is the compound of formula II where m is 1 and R3=R9 and R4=R10 together are =O.
IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. The protecting group can be deprotected after alkylation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 7
Figure imgf000021_0001
(X) or (XVIII) (XXIII)
The compound of formula II where m is 2 to 4, q is 0, t is 0 or 1 , and n is 1 or 2, R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R3 and R4 together are =O and R6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000021_0002
(D)
wherein A is described as above, can be prepared via reaction of scheme 8.
In the reaction of scheme 8, A, t, n, R2, R3, R4 and R6 are as above. Y is a leaving group and p is 1 to 3. R9 and R10 together are =O.
The compound of formula IX can be converted to the compound of formula X via reaction of step (r) using Mitsunobu condensation in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (c). The compound of formula IX can also be converted to the compound reaction of step (s) in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with tne reaction of step (c).
The compound of formula X can be converted to the compound of formula XII via reaction of step (t) in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (f). The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
The compound of formula XII is the compound of formula II where R3=R9 and R4=R10 together are =O.
IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. The protecting group can be deprotcctcd after alkylation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
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Reaction Scheme 8
Figure imgf000023_0001
(X) (XII)
The compound of formula II where m is 2 to 4, q is 1, t is 0 or 1 , and n is 1 or 2, R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R3 and R4 together are =O and R6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000023_0002
(ID
wherein A is described as above, can be prepared via reaction of scheme 9.
In the reaction of scheme 9, A, t, n, m, q, R1, R2, and R6 are as above. Y is chloro or bromo and p is 1 to 3. R9 and R10 together are =O. The compound of formula XVII (prepared in the same manner as des in the connection with the reaction scheme 4) can be converted to the compound of formula XVTII via reaction of step (u) in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with reaction step (k).
The compound of formula XVIII can be converted to the compound of formula XIX via reaction of step (v) in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction step (1). The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
The compound of formula XIX is the compound of formula II where R3=R9 and R4=R10 together are =O.
IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective
Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. The protecting group can be deprotected after alkylation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
Remainder of this page intentionally left blank.
Reaction Scheme 9
Figure imgf000025_0001
(XIX)
The compound of formula I where m is 0 to 4, q is 0 or 1, t is 0 or 1, and n is 1 or 2, R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R3 and R4 together are =O and R5 is hydrogen or alkyl having 1 to 5 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000025_0002
(IA) wherein A is described as above, can be prepared via reaction of scheme 10. In the reaction of scheme 10, A, t, m, n, q, R1 and R2 are as above. R"
=O. R6 is alkyl having 1 to 2 carbon atoms. R7 is H. R8 is alkyl having 1 to 5 carbon atoms, Y is a halide and P is a protecting group.
The compound of formula II can be converted to the compound of formula XXIV via reaction of step (w) by protecting the carbonyl group for example by acyclic or cyclic ketals and the like. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
The compound of formula XXIV can be reduced to the compound of formula XXV via reaction step (x) in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (a) in reaction scheme 1.
In the compound of formula XXV, protecting group can be deprotected to give the compound of formula I where R5 is H.
The compound of formula XXV can be converted to the compound of formula XXVI via reaction of step (y) by first deprotecting the protective group. The suitable conditions for the deprotection can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene and then by alkylation with the compound of formula IV. Any conventional method of etherification of a hydroxyl group with a halide can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (y). The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
The compound of formula XXVT is the compound of formula I where R5 is alkyl having 1 to 5 carbon atoms.
IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. The protecting group can be deprotected after alkylation utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. Reaction Scheme 10
Figure imgf000027_0001
The compound of formula VII, where t is 0 or 1, n is 1 or 2, i.e. compounds of formula:
A-(CH2)t+n-OH
and compound of formula VIII, where t is 0 or 1, n is 1 or 2, i.e. compounds of formula:
A-(CH2)t+n-Y
can be prepared via reaction scheme of scheme 11.
In the reaction of scheme 11, A is described as above. Y is a leaving group. The compound of formula XXVII can be reduced to the compound of formula XXVIII via reaction of step (z). The reaction is carried out utilizing a conventional reducing agent for example alkali metal hydride such as lithium aluminum hydride. The reaction is carried out in a suitable solvent, such as tetrahydrofuran. Any of the conditions conventional in such reduction reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step
(Z).
The compound of formula XXVIII is the compound of formula VII where t is 0 and n is 1.
The compound of formula XXVIII can be converted to the compound of formula XXIX by displacing hydroxyl group with a halogen group preferred halogen being bromo or chloro. Appropriate halogenating reagents include but are not limited to thionyl chloride, bromine, phosphorous tribromide, carbon tetrabromide and the like. Any conditions conventional in such halogenation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (a').
The compound of formula XXIX is the compound of formula VIII where t is 0 and n is 1. The compound of formula XXIX can be converted to the compound of formula XXX by reacting XXIX with an alkali metal cyanide for example sodium or potassium cyanide. The reaction is carried out in a suitable solvent, such as ethanol, dimethyl sulfoxide. Any of the conditions conventionally used in the preparation of nitrile car out the reaction of step (b').
The compound of formula XXX can be converted to the compound of formula XXXI via reaction step (c3) by acid or base hydrolysis. In carrying out this reaction it is generally preferred to utilize basic hydrolysis, for example aqueous sodium hydroxide. Any of the conditions conventionally used in hydrolysis of nitrile can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (c').
The compound of formula XXXI can be reduced to give the compound of formula XXXII via reaction of step (d5)- This reaction can be carried out in the same manner as described hereinbefore in the reaction of step (z). The compound of formula XXXTI is the compound of formula VII where t is 1 and n is 1.
The compound of formula XXXII can be converted to the compound of formula XXXIIl via reaction of step (e') in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (a'). The compound of formula XXXIII is the compound of formula VIII where t is 1 and n is 1.
The compound of formula XXIX can be reacted with diethyl malonate utilizing a suitable base for example sodium hydride to give compound of formula XXXIV. The reaction is carried out in suitable solvents, such as dimethylformamidc, tctrahydrofuran and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such alkylation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (f ).
The compound of formula XXXIV can be hydro lyzed and decarboxylated utilizing sodium hydroxide in suitable solvent, such as ethanol-water to give the compound of formula XXXV. Any of the conditions conventional in such reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (g').
The compound of formula XXXV can be converted to the compound of formula XXXVI via reaction of step (h') in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (z). The compound of formula XXXVI is the compound of formula VII where I is 1 and n is 2. The compound of formula XXXVI can be converted to the compoun<
XXXVII via reaction of step (i') in the same manner as described hereinbefore in connection with the reaction of step (a'). The compound of formula XXXVII is the compound of formula VIII where t is 1 and n is 2. The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
IfA is phenyl substituted by 1 or 2 groups of hydroxyl, it is generally preferred to protect the hydroxyl group of the compound of formula XXVII. The suitable protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
Reaction Scheme 11
(g1)
A-CH2-CH2CH2Y-*- - A-CH2-CH2CH2OII -«- CO
A-CH2-CH2CO2H A-CH2-CH(CO2Et)2 (XXXVXT) (XXXVI)
A-CCkH
(xxvrπ
Figure imgf000030_0001
(e1) (d1) (C)
A-CH2-CH2-Y A-CH2-CH2-OH A-CH2-CO2H A-CH2-CN (XXXHI) (XXXII) (XXXI) (XXX)
The compound of formula VI where m is O to 1, R2 is halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms. R3 and R4 are hydrogen, and R6 is alkyl group having from 1 to 2 carbon atoms i.e. compounds of formula:
R
C(R 33dRD44')(CH2)mCO2Rb
OH can be prepared via reaction of scheme 12.
In the reaction of scheme 12, R2, R3, R4, and R6 are as above. R11 is a hydroxy protecting group. Y is a halide.
The compound of formula XXXVIII can be converted to the compound of formula XXXIX via reaction of step (j ') by first protecting the hydroxy group by utilizing suitable protecting groups such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene and then by deprotecting the ester group by ester hydrolysis.
The compound of formula XXXIX can be reduced to the compound of formula XL by utilizing conventional reducing reagent that converts acid to an alcohol via reaction of step (k'). In carrying out this reaction it is generally preferred but not limited to utilize lithium aluminum hydride. The reaction is carried out in a suitable solvent such as tetrahydrofuran and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such reduction reactions can be utilized to carry oτtt the reaction of step (k').
The compound of formula XL can be converted to the compound of formula XLI by displacing hydroxy group with a halogen preferred halogen being bromo or chloro. Appropriate halogenating reagents include but are not limited to thionyl chloride, bromine, phosphorous tribromide, carbon tetrabromide and the like. Any conditions conventional in such halogenatkra reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (1').
The compound of formula XLI can be converted to the compound of formula XLII by reacting XLI with an alkali metal cyanide for example sodium or potassium cyanide. The reaction is carried out in a suitable solvent such as dimethyl sulfoxide. Any of the conditions conventionally used in the preparation of nitriles can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (m').
The compound of formula XLII can be converted to the compound of formula XLIII via reaction step (n') by acid or base hydrolysis. In carrying out this reaction, it is generally preferred to utilize basic hydrolysis, for example aqueous sodium hydroxide. Any of the conditions conventional for the hydrolysis of nitrile can be utilized to reaction of step (n')-
The compound of formula XLIII can be converted to the compound of formula XLIV via reaction of step (o ') by removal of hydroxy protecting group utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
The compound of formula XLIV can be converted to compound of formula VI where m is 0 and R6 is an alkyl group having from 1 or 2 carbon atoms by esterification of the compound of formula XLIV with methanol or ethanol. The reaction can be carried out either by using catalysts for example H2SO4, TsOH and the like or by using dehydrating agent for example dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such esterification reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction.
The compound of formula XLI can be reacted with diethyl malonate utilizing a suitable base for example sodium hydride to give compound of formula XLV. The reaction is carried out in suitable solvents, such as dimethylformamide, tetrahydrofuran and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such alkylation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (p').
The compound of formula XLV can be hydrolyzed by acid or base and removal of hydroxy protecting group utilizing suitable deprotecting reagents such as those described in Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene to give compound of formula XLVI via reaction of step (q').
The compound of formula XLVI can be converted to the compound of formula VI where m is 1 and R6 is an alkyl group having from 1 or 2 carbon atoms by esterification of compound of formula XLVI with methanol or ethanol. The reaction can be carried out either by using catalysts for example H2SO4, TsOH and the like or by using dehydrating agent for example dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such esterification reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction. The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization. Reaction Scheme 12
Figure imgf000033_0001
(XXXVIII) (XXXIX) (XL)
(I1)
Figure imgf000033_0002
The compound of formula IX where R2 is halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms or alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, R9 and R10 together are =O. i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000033_0003
can be prepared via reaction of scheme 13. In the reaction of Scheme 13, R 2 , T R, 9 a_ndJ T R> 10 are as above.
The compound of formula IX can be synthesized according to the method of George M Rubottom et al., J. Org. Chem. 1983, 48, 1550-1552.
Reaction Spheme 13
Figure imgf000034_0001
(XLVII)
Figure imgf000034_0002
The compound of formula XXXVIII, where R2 is halo, alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon aattoommss oorr aallkkyyll hhaavviinngg ffrroomm 11 ttoo 33 ccaarrbboonn a atoms and R6 is alkyl group having from 1 to 2 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000034_0003
can be prepared via reaction of scheme 14.
In the reaction of scheme 14, R2and R6 are as above.
The compound of formula XLVII can be converted to the compound of formula XXXViπ via reaction of step (s') by estcrifϊcation of compound of formula XLVII with methanol or ethanol. The reaction can be carried out either by using catalysts for example H2SO4, TsOH and the like or by using dehydrating agent for example dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such esterifϊcation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of stej can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
Reaction Scheme 14
Figure imgf000035_0001
(XLVII) (XXXVlII)
The compound of formula XLVII, where R2 is halo, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000035_0002
are either commercially available or can be prepared according to the methods described in the literature as follows:
1. 3-Br or F-2-OHC6H3CO2H Canadian Journal of Chemistry (2001), 79(11) 1541-1545.
2. 4-Br-2-OHC6H3CO2H WO 9916747 or JP 04154773.
3. 2-Br-O-OHC6H3CO2H JP 47039101. 4. 2-Br-3-OHC6H3CO2H WO 9628423.
5. 4-Br-3-OHC6H3CO2H WO 2001002388.
6. 3-Br-5-OHC6H3CO2H Journal of labelled Compounds and Radiopharmaceuticals (1992), 31 (3), 175-82.
7. 2-Br-5-OHC6H3CO2H and 3-CM-OHC6H3CO2H 8. 2-131--4-OHC6H3CO2H and 3-Br-4-OHC6H3CO2H WO 20022018323 .
9. 2-Cl-O-OHC6H3CO2H JP 06293700
10. 2-0-3-0HC6H3CO2H
Proceedings of the Indiana Academy of Science (1983), Volume date 1982, 92, 145-51. 11. 3-0-5-0HC6H3CO2H WO 2002000633 and WO 2002044145. 12. 2-0-5-0HC6H3CO2H WO 9745400.
13. 5-1-2-OHC6H3CO2H and 3-1, 2-OHC6H3CO2H Z. Chem. (1976), 16(8), 319-320.
14. 4-1-2-OHC6H3CO2H Journal of Chemical Research, Synopses (1994), (11), 405.
15. 6-1-2-OHC6H3CO2H US 4932999.
16. 2-1-3-OHC6H3CO2H and 4-1-3-OHC6H3CO2H WO 9912928. 17. 5-1-3-OHC6H3CO2H
J. Med. Chem. (1973), 16(6), 684-7.
18. 2-1-4-OHC6H3CO2H
Collection of Czechoslovak Chemical Communications, (1991), 56(2), 459-77.
19. 3-1-4-OHC6H3CO2, J.O.C. (1990), 55(18), 5287-91.
The compound of formula XLVII, where R2 is alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000036_0001
can be synthesized via the reaction of scheme 15.
In the reaction of scheme 15, R2 is as above, and R6 is alkyl group having from 1 to 2 carbon atoms.
The compound of formula XLVTII can be converted to the compound of formula XLIX by reducing aldehyde to primary alcohol. In carrying out this reaction, it is preferred but not limited to use sodium borohydride as the reducing reagent. Any of the conditions suitable in such reduction reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (f).
The compound of formula XLIX can be converted to the compound of formula L via reaction of step (u') by protecting 1-3 Diols by using 1,1,3,3-Tetraisopropyldisiloxane. The suitable conditions, for this protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
The compound of formula L can be converted to the compound of formula LI via reaction of step (v') by protecting phenol group by using benzyl bromide. The suitable conditions for this protecting group can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
The compound of formula LI can be converted to the compound of formula LTI by deprotection using tetrabutylammonium fluoride via reaction of step (w'). The suitable conditions for the deprotection can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene.
The compound of formula LII can be converted to compound of formula LIII via reaction of step (x') by oxidation. Any conventional oxidizing group that converts primary alcohol to an acid for example chromium oxide and the like can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (x').
The compound of formula LIII can be converted to the compound of formula LIV by esterifϊcation of compound of formula LIII with methanol or ethanol. The reaction can be carried out either by using catalysts for example H2SO4, TsOH and the like or by using dehydrating agent for example dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and the like. Any of the conditions conventional in such esterification reactions can be utilize reaction of step (y').
The compound of formula LIV can be converted to the compound of formula LV by etherifying or alkylating the compound of formula LIV with methyl halide or ethyl halide or propyl halide by using suitable base for example potassium carbonate, sodium hydride pyridine and the like. The reaction is carried out in conventional solvents, such as terahydrofuran, dimethylformamide, dichloromethane and the like. The reaction is generally carried out at temperatures of from O0C to 400C. Any of the conditions suitable in such alkylation reactions can be utilized to carry out the reaction of step (z')-
The compound of formula LV can be converted to the compound of formula LVI via reaction of step (a") by depro lection of ester and benzyl groups. The suitable deprotecting conditions can be described in the Protective Groups in Organic Synthesis by T. Greene. The product can be isolated and purified by techniques such as extraction, evaporation, chromatography, and recrystallization.
Remainder of this page intentionally left blank.
Reaction Scheme 15
Figure imgf000039_0001
(V)
Figure imgf000039_0002
(y?)
Figure imgf000039_0003
The compound of formula XLVII, where R is alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000039_0004
are either commercially available or can be prepared according to the methods described in the literature as follows: 1. 2-OMe-4-OHC6H3CO2H US 2001034343 or WO 9725992.
Figure imgf000040_0001
J.O.C (2001), 66(23), 7883-88.
3. 2-OMe-5-OHC6H3CO2H
US 6194406 (Page 96) and Journal of the American Chemical Society (1985), 107(8), 2571-3.
4. 3-OEt-5-OHC6H3CO2H Taiwan Kexue (1996), 49(1), 51-56.
5. 4-OEt-3 -OHC6H3CO2H WO 9626176 6. 2-OEt-4-OHC6H3CO2H
Takeda Kenkyusho Nempo (1965), 24,221-8.
JP 07070025.
7. 3-OEt-4-OHC6H3CO2H
WO 9626176. 8. 3-OPr-2-OHC6H3CO2H
JP 07206658, DE 2749518.
9.4-OPr-2-OHC6H3CO2H
Farmacia (Bucharest) (1970), 18(8), 461-6.
JP 08119959. 10. 2-OPr-5-OHC5H3CO2H and 2-OEt-5-OHC6H3CO2H
Adapt synthesis from US 6194406 (Page 96) by using propyl iodide and ethyl iodide.
11. 4-OPr-3 -OHC6H3CO2H Adapt synthesis from WO 9626176
12. 2-OPr-4-OHC6H3CO2H Adapt synthesis from Takeda Kenkyusho Nempo (1965), 24,221-8 by using propyl halide.
13. 4-OEt-3-OHC6H3CO2H
Biomedical Mass Spectrometry (1985), 12(4), 163-9.
14. 3-OPr-5-OHC6H3CO2H Adapt synthesis from Taiwan Kexue (1996), 49(1), 51-56 by using propyl halide.
The compound of formula XLVlI, where R2 is an alkyl having 1 to 3 carbon atoms, i.e. compounds of formula:
Figure imgf000041_0001
are either commercially available or can be prepared according to the methods described in the literature as follows:
1. 5-Me-3-0HC6H3CO2H and 2-Me-5-OHC6H3CO2H WO 9619437.
J.O.C. 2001, 66, 7883-88.
2. 2-Me-4-OHC6H3CO2H WO 8503701.
3. 3 -Et^-OHC6H3CO2H and 5-El-2-OHC6H3CO2H J. Med. Chem. (1971), 14(3), 265.
4. 4-Et-2-OHC6H3CO2H
Yaoxue Xuebao (1998), 33(1), 67-71. 5. 2-Et-O-OHC6H3CO2H and 2-n-Pr-6-OHC6H3CO2H J. Chem. Soc, Perkin Trans 1 (1979), (8), 2069-78.
6. 2-Et-3-OHC6H3CO2H
JP 10087489 and WO 9628423.
7. 4-Et-3-OHC6H3CO2H J.O.C. 2001, 66, 7883-88.
WO 9504046.
8. 2-Et-5-OHC6H3CO2H J.A.C.S (1974), 96(7), 2121-9.
9. 2-Et-4-OHC6H3CO2H and 3 -EM-OHC6H3CO2H JP 04282345.
10. 3-n-Pr-2-OHC6H3CO2H J.O.C (1991), 56(14), 4525-29.
11. 4-n-Pr-2-OHC6H3CO2H EP 279630. 12. 5-n-Pr-2-OHC6H3CO2H
J. Med. Chem (1981), 24(10), 1245-49. 13. 2-n-Pr-3-OHC6H3CO2H O 9509843 and WO 9628423.
14. 4-n-Pr-3-OHC6H3CO2H WO 9504046. 15. 2-n-Pr-5-OHC6H3CO2H
Synthesis can be adapted from J.A.C.S (1974), 96(7), 2121-9 by using ethyl alpha formylvalerate.
16. 3-n-Pr-4-OHC6H3C02H
Polymer (1991), 32(11) 2096-105. 17. 2-n-Pr-4-OHC6H3CO2H
3-Propylρhenol can be methylated to 3-Propylanisole, which was then foπnylated to 4-
Methoxy-3-benzaldehyde. The aldehyde can be oxidized by Jone's reagent to give corresponding acid and deprotection of methyl group by BBr3 will give the title compound. 18. 1. 3-Et-5-OHC6H3CO2H and 3-Pr-n-5-OHC6H3CO2H
Adapt synthesis from J.O.C.2001, 66, 7883-88 by using 2-Ethylacrolein and 2-
Propylacrolein.
USE IN METHODS OF TREATMENT
This invention provides a method for treating a mammalian subject with a condition selected from the group consisting of insulin resistance syndrome, diabetes (both primary essential diabetes such as Type I Diabetes or Type II Diabetes and secondary nonessential diabetes) and polycystic ovary syndrome, comprising administering to the subject an amount of a biologically active agent as described herein effective to treat the condition. In accordance with the method of this invention a symptom of diabetes or the chance of developing a symptom of diabetes, such as atherosclerosis, obesity, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, nephropathy, neuropathy, retinopathy, foot ulceration and cataracts, each such symptom being associated with diabetes, can be reduced. This invention also provides a method for treating hyperlipidemia comprising administering to the subject an amount of a biologically active agent as described herein effective to treat the condition. Compounds reduce serum triglycerides and free fatty acids in hyperlipidemic animals. This invention also provides a method for treating cachexia comprising administering to the subject an amount of a biologically active agent as described herein effective to treat the cachexia. This invention also f treating obesity comprising administering to the subject an amount of a biologically active agent as described herein effective to treat the condition. This invention also provides a method for treating a condition selected from atherosclerosis or arteriosclerosis comprising administering to the subject an amount of a biologically active agent as described herein effective to treat the condition. The active agents of this invention are effective to treat hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, cachexia, obesity, atherosclerosis or arteriosclerosis whether or not the subject has diabetes or insulin resistance syndrome. The agent can be administered by any conventional route of systemic administration. Preferably the agent is administered orally. Accordingly, it is preferred for the medicament to be formulated for oral administration. Other routes of administration that can be used in accordance with this invention include rectally, parenterally, by injection (e.g. intravenous, subcutaneous, intramuscular or intraperitioneal injection), or nasally.
Further embodiments of each of the uses and methods of treatment of this invention comprise administering any one of the embodiments of the biologically active agents described above. In the interest of avoiding unnecessary redundancy, each such agent and group of agents is not being repeated, but they are incorporated into this description of uses and methods of treatment as if they were repeated.
Many of the diseases or disorders that are addressed by the compounds of the invention fall into two broad categories: Insulin resistance syndromes and consequences of chronic hyperglycemia. Dysregulation of fuel metabolism, especially insulin resistance, which can occur in the absence of diabetes (persistent hyperglycemia) per se, is associated with a variety of symptoms, including hyperlipidemia, atherosclerosis, obesity, essential hypertension, fatty liver disease (NASH; nonalcoholic steatohepatitis), and, especially in the context of cancer or systemic inflammatory disease, cachexia. Cachexia can also occur in the context of Type I Diabetes or late-stage Type II Diabetes. By improving tissue fuel metabolism, active agents of the invention are useful for preventing or amelioriating diseases and symptoms associated with insulin resistance. While a cluster of signs and symptoms associated with insulin resistance may coexist in an individual patient, it many cases only one symptom may dominate, due to individual differences in vulnerability of the many physiological systems affected by insulin resistance. Nonetheless, since insulin resistance is a major contributor to many disease conditions, drugs which address this cellular and molecular defect are useful for amelioration of virtually any symptom in any organ system that may De due to, or exacerbated by, insulin resistance.
When insulin resistance and concurrent inadequate insulin production by pancreatic islets are sufficiently severe, chronic hyperglycemia occurs, defining the onset of Type II diabetes mellitus (NIDDM). In addition to the metabolic disorders related to insulin resistance indicated above, disease symptoms secondary to hyperglycemia also occur in patients with NIDDM. These include nephropathy, peripheral neuropathy, retinopathy, microvascular disease, ulceration of the extremities, and consequences of nonenzymatic glycosylation of proteins, e.g. damage to collagen and other connective tissues. Attenuation of hyperglycemia reduces the rate of onset and severity of these consequences of diabetes. Because active agents and compositions of the invention help to reduce hyperglycemia in diabetes, they are useful for prevention and amelioration of complications of chronic hyperglycemia.
Both human and non-human mammalian subjects can be treated in accordance with the treatment method of this invention. The optimal dose of a particular active agent of the invention for a particular subject can be determined in the clinical setting by a skilled clinician. In the case of oral administration to a human for treatment of disorders related to insulin resistance, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, cachexia or obesity the agent is generally administered in a daily dose of from 1 mg to 400 mg, administered once or twice per day. In the case of oral administration to a mouse the agent is generally administered in a daily dose from 1 to 300 mg of the agent per kilogram of body weight. Active agents of the invention are used as monotherapy in diabetes or insulin resistance syndrome, or in combination with one or more other drugs with utility in these types of diseases, e.g. insulin releasing agents, prandial insulin releasers, biguanides, or insulin itself. Such additional drugs are administered in accord with standard clinical practice. In some cases, agents of the invention will improve the efficacy of other classes of drugs, permitting lower (and therefore less toxic) doses of such agents to be administered to patients with satisfactory therapeutic results. Established safe and effective dose ranges in humans for representative compounds are: metformin 500 to 2550 mg/day; glybuiide 1.25 to 20 mg/day; GLUCOV ANCE (combined formulation of metformin and glyburide) 1.25 to 20 mg/day glyburide and 250 to 2000 mg/day metformin; atorvastatin 10 to 80 mg/day; lovastatin pravastatin 10 to 40 mg/day; and simvastatin 5-80 mg/day; clofibrate ZUUU mg/day; gemfibrozil 1200 to 2400 mg/day, rosiglitazone 4 to 8 mg/day; pioglitazone 15 to 45 mg/day; acarbose 75-300 mg/day; repaglinide 0.5 to 16 mg/day.
Type I Diabetes Mellitus: A patient with Type I diabetes manages their disease primarily by self-administration of one to several doses of insulin per day, with frequent monitoring blood glucose to permit appropriate adjustment of the dose and timing of insulin administration. Chronic hyperglycemia leads to complications such as nephropathy, neuropathy, retinopathy, foot ulceration, and early mortality; hypoglycemia due to excessive insulin dosing can cause cognitive dysfunction or unconsciousness. A patient with Type I diabetes is treated with 1 to 400 mg/day of an active agent of this invention, in tablet or capsule form either as a single or a divided dose. The anticipated effect will be a reduction in the dose or frequency of administration of insulin required to maintain blood glucose in a satisfactory range, and a reduced incidence and severity of hypoglycemic episodes. Clinical outcome is monitored by measurement of blood glucose and glycosylated hemoglobin (an index of adequacy of glyccmic control integrated over a period of several months), as well as by reduced incidence and severity of typical complications of diabetes. A biologically active agent of this invention can be administered in conjunction with islet transplantation to help maintain the anti-diabetic efficacy of the islet transplant.
Type II Diabetes Mellitus: A typical patient with Type II diabetes (NIDDM) manages their disease by programs of diet and exercise as well as by taking medications such as metformin, glyburide, repaglinide, rosiglitazone, or acarbose, all of which provide some improvement in glycemic control in some patients, but none of which are free of side effects or eventual treatment failure due to disease progression. Islet failure occurs over time in patients with NIDDM, necessitating insulin injections in a large fraction of patients. It is anticipated that daily treatment with an active agent of the invention (with or without additional classes of antidiabetic medication) will improve glycemic control, reduce the rate of islet failure, and reduce the incidence and severity of typical symptoms of diabetes. In addition, active agents of the invention will reduce elevated serum triglycerides and fatty acids, thereby reducing the risk of cardiovascular disease, a major cause of death of diabetic patients. As is the case for all other therapeutic agents for diabetes, dose optimization is done in individual patients according t< effect, and susceptibility to side effects.
Hyperlipidemia: Elevated triglyceride and free fatty acid levels in blood affect a substantial fraction of the population and are an important risk factor for atherosclerosis and myocardial infarction. Active agents of the invention are useful for reducing circulating triglycerides and free fatty acids in hyperlipidcmic patients. Hyperlipidemic patients often also have elevated blood cholesterol levels, which also increase the risk of cardiovascular disease. Cholesterol-lowering drugs such as HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors ("statins") can be administered to hyperlipidemic patients in addition to agents of the invention, optionally incorporated into the same pharmaceutical composition.
Fatty Liver Disease: A substantial fraction of the population is affected by fatty liver disease, also known as nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH); NASH is often associated with obesity and diabetes. Hepatic steatosis, the presence of droplets of triglycerides with hepatocytes, predisposes the liver to chronic inflammation (detected in biopsy samples as infiltration of inflammatory leukocytes), which can lead to fibrosis and cirrhosis. Fatty liver disease is generally detected by observation of elevated serum levels of liver- specific enzymes such as the transaminases ALT and AST, which serve as indices of hepatocytc injury, as well as by presentation of symptoms which include fatigue and pain in the region of the liver, though definitive diagnosis often requires a biopsy. The anticipated benefit is a reduction in liver inflammation and fat content, resulting in attenuation, halting, or reversal of the progression of NASH toward fibrosis and cirrhosis.
PHARMACEUTICAL COMPOSITIONS
This invention provides a pharmaceutical composition comprising a biologically active agent as described herein and a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier. Further embodiments of the pharmaceutical composition of this invention comprise any one of the embodiments of the biologically active agents described above. In the interest of avoiding unnecessary redundancy, each such agent and group of agents is not being repeated, but they are incorporated into this description of pharmaceutical compositions as if they were repeated. Preferably the composition is adapted for oral administration, e.g. in coated tablet, dragee, hard or soft gelatin capsule, solution, emulsion or suspension. In general the oral composition will comprise from 1 mg to 400 mg of such agent. It is convenient tor the subject to swallow one or two tablets, coated tablets, dragees, or gelatin capsules per day. However the composition can also be adapted for administration by any other conventional means of systemic administration including rectally, e.g. in the form of suppositories, parenterally, e.g. in the form of injection solutions, or nasally.
The biologically active compounds can be processed with pharmaceutically inert, inorganic or organic carriers for the production of pharmaceutical compositions. Lactose, corn starch or derivatives thereof, talc, stearic acid or its salts and the like can be used, for example, as such carriers for tablets, coated tablets, dragees and hard gelatin capsules. Suitable carriers for soft gelatin capsules are, for example, vegetable oils, waxes, fats, semi-solid and liquid polyols and the like. Depending on the nature of the active ingredient no carriers are, however, usually required in the case of soft gelatin capsules, other than the soft gelatin itself. Suitable carriers for the production of solutions and syrups are, for example, water, polyols, glycerol, vegetable oils and the like. Suitable carriers for suppositories are, for example, natural or hardened oils, waxes, fats, semil- liquid or liquid polyols and the like.
The pharmaceutical compositions can, moreover, contain preservatives, solubilizers, stabilizers, wetting agents, emulsifϊers, sweeteners, colorants, flavorants, salts for varying the osmotic pressure, buffers, coating agents or antioxidants. They can also contain still other therapeutically valuable substances, particularly antidiabetic or hypolipidemic agents that act through mechanisms other than those underlying the effects of the compounds of the invention. Agents which can advantageously be combined with compounds of the invention in a single formulation include but are not limited to biguanides such as metformin, insulin releasing agents such as the sulfonylurea insulin releaser glyburide and other sulfonylurea insulin releasers, cholesterol-lowering drugs such as the "statin" HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors such as atrovastatin, lovastatin , pravastatin and simvastatin, PPAR-alpha agonists such as clofibrate and gemfibrozil, PPAR-gamma agonists such as Ihiazolidinediones (e.g. rosiglitazone and pioglitazone, alpha-glucosidase inhibitors such as acarbose (which inhibit starch digestion), and prandial insulin releasers such as repaglinide. The amounts of cotnpl combined with compounds of the invention in single formulations arc in accord with the doses used in standard clinical practice. Established safe and effective dose ranges for certain representative compounds are set forth above.
The invention will be better understood by reference to the following examples which illustrate but do not limit the invention described herein.
EXAMPLES
EXAMPLE A. Improvement of metabolic abnormalities in insulin-dependent diabetes
Streptozotocin (STZ) is a toxin that selectively destroys insulin-producing pancreatic beta cells, and is widely used to induce insulin-dependent diabetes in experimental animals.
Female Balb/C mice (8 weeks old; 18-20 grams body weight) are treated with streptozotocin (STZ) (50 mg/kg i.p. on each of five consecutive days). Fourteen days after the last dose of STZ, blood glucose is measured to verify that the animals are diabetic, and the mice are divided into two groups of 5 animals each, one group receiving a compound of the invention (250 mg/kg) daily by oral gavagc, and the other receiving vehicle (0.75% hydroxypropylmethylcellulose, a suspending agent, in water). A group of nondiabetic mice from the same cohort that did not receive STZ is also monitored. Blood samples are taken periodically for determination of blood glucose concentrations, and body weights are also recorded.
After several weeks of treatment, blood glucose concentrations in mice treated orally with the compound of the invention and in vehicle-treated control animals are measured. A blood glucose concentration beginning to decrease toward baseline is considered a positive result, whereas blood glucose in the vehicle-treated control animals is expected to continue to rise. Body weights and blood glucose, triglyceride and cholesterol concentrations 14 weeks after the beginning of drug treatment are measured. EXAMPLE B: Improved survival of mice with lethal insulin-depenc
Female Balb/C mice (14 weeks old) are treated with a single dose of streptozotocin (175 mg/kg i.p.) to induce severe insulin-dependent diabetes. Seven days later, mice are divided into three treatment groups: A compound of the invention, pioglitazone, and vehicle. Mice are treated daily via oral gavage, and survival is monitored over time.
EXAMPLE C: Reduction of mortality in severe insulin-dependent diabetes
Female balb/C mice (19 wks of age at start of experiment) are challenged with multiple high doses of STZ (75 mg/kg i.p. on 5 consecutive days). Animals are then divided in two groups (20 mice / group) matched for severity of diabetes. Four days after the last dose of STZ, treatments are initiated. One group receives Vehicle (0.4 ml of 0.75% HPMC, p.o.), and the other group receives a compound of the invention orally (30 mg/kg/day ). After three weeks of daily treatment, cumulative mortality in the two groups is recorded.
EXAMPLE D: Reduction in the incidence of spontaneous diabetes and mortality in NOD mice
A substantial proportion of NOD ("non-obese diabetic") mice develop insulin-dependent diabetes as a consequence of spontaneous autoimmune destruction of pancreatic islet cells. Two groups of 20 NOD mice (6 weeks old) are treated daily with either oral Vehicle (0.4 ml of 0.75% hydroxypropyl methylcellulose in water; HPMC) or a compound of the invention (200 mg/kg/day) suspended in HPMC. The incidence of mortality due to spontaneous development of severe insulin-dependent diabetes is monitored over a period of seven months.
EXAMPLE E. Reduction in hyperglycemia and hyperlipidemia, and amelioration of fatty liver disease in ob/ob obese diabetic mice
Ob/ob mice have a defect in the gene for lcptin, a protein involved in appetite regulation and energy metabolism, and are hyperphagic, obese, and insulin resistant. They develop hyperglycemia and fatty liver. Male lean (ob/+ heterozygote) and obese (ob/ob homozygote) C57B1 approximately 8 weeks of age arc obtained from Jackson Labs (Bar Harbor, ME) and randomly assigned into groups of 5 animals such that body weights and blood glucose concentrations are similar between groups. All animals are maintained under the control of temperature (23 C), relative humidity (50 ± 5 %) and light (7:00 - 19:00), and allowed free access to water and laboratory chow (Formulab Diet 5008, Quality Lab Products, Elkridge, MD). Blood glucose is routinely determined with glucose test strips and a Glucometer Elite XL device (Bayer Corporation). At selected time points, blood samples (~100 microliters) are obtained with a heparinized capillary tube via the retro-orbital sinus for serum chemistry analysis. Serum chemistry (glucose, triglycerides, cholesterol, BUN, creatinine, AST, ALT, SDH, CPK and free fatty acids) analyses are performed on a Hitachi 717 Analyzer, and plasma insulin and pancreatic insulin are measured by an electrochemiluminescent immunoassay (Origen Analyzer, Igen, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD).
Groups of ob/ob mice are divided into treatment cohorts as indicated below, and given daily oral doses of a compound of the invention (10, 30, 100, 150 or 300 mg), rosiglitazone (1, 3, 10 or 30 mg), or pioglitazone (30 or 100 mg). The latter two compounds are insulin-sensitizing drugs used in the treatment of human patients with non-insulin dependent diabetes mellitus, and are used as comparators for efficacy and safety of compounds of the invention. The dose ranges of compounds in this experiment is chosen to include both suboptimal and potentially supraoptimal doses.
Ob/ob mice develop chronic inflammatory fatty liver disease and are considered to be an animal model for nonalcoholic steatohepatitis (NASH), a condition which can lead toward progressive cirrhosis and liver dysfunction. In NASH, fat accumulation increases the susceptibility of the liver to inflammatory injury. One characeristic sign of NASH in patients is, in the absence of viral infection or alcoholism, elevated levels in serum of enzymes that are released from damaged hepatocytes, e.g. alanine aminotransferase (ALT), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), and sorbitol dehydrogenase (SDH). These enzymes are elevated in ob/ob mice as a consequence of fatty liver and secondary inflammation. EXAMPLE F: Acute hypoglycemic effects of compounds of the invi mice: Experiment 1.
Compounds of the invention display acute antihyperglycemic activity in animals with non insulin-dependent diabetes.
Male ob/ob diabetic mice are randomized into groups of five animals each. Body weights arc about 50 —55 g and blood glucose is approximately 300 mg/dL in the fed state. A single oral dose of a test substance suspended in 0.5% carboxymethylcellulosc vehicle is administered by gavage. Blood glucose is measured in blood droplets obtained by nicking a tail vein with a razor using glucometer test strips and a Glucometer Elite XL device (Bayer) at 0, 0.5, 2, 4, 6 and 18 hours after the initial dosing. A 10% reduction in blood glucose versus oral vehicle is considered a positive screening result. Blood glucose reductions are generally expected to be maximal at 6 hours after drug administration.
EXAMPLE G: Acute hypoglycemic effects of compounds of the invention in diabetic mice: Expt 2
Compounds of the invention display acute antihyperglycemic activity in animals with noninsulin-dependent diabetes.
Male ob/ob mice (50-55 grams; blood glucose ~300 mg/dL) are divided into groups of five animals each, and given a single oral dose of test drug (250 mg/kg) suspended in 0.5% carboxymethylcellulose vehicle; a control group received oral vehicle alone. Six hours after oral administration of test drugs or vehicle (control), blood samples are obtained from a tail vein and glucose content is determined with a glucometer.
EXAMPLE H: Antidiabetic effects of compounds of the invention in db/db mice
Db/db mice have a defect in leptin signaling, leading to hyperphagia, obesity and diabetes. Moreover, unlike ob/ob mice which have relatively robust islets, their insulin- producing pancreatic islet cells undergo failure during chronic hyperglycemia, so that they transition from hyperinsulinemia (associated with peripheral insulin resistance) to hypoinsulinemic diabetes. Male db/db mice are given daily oral treatments with vehicle (0.75% hydroxypropylmethylcellulose), a compound of the invention (150 mg/kg), or pioglitazone (100 mg/kg). Blood samples are obtained via the retro-orbital sinus for serum chemistry analysis, or via the tail vein for glucose measurement with a test strip and glucometer. The dose of pioglitazone used in this experiment was reported in the literature to be a maximally-effective dose for treatment of db/db mice (Shimaya et al. (2000), Metabolism 49:411-7).
In a second experiment in db/db mice, antidiabetic activity of a compound of the invention (150 mg/kg) is compared with that of rosiglitazone (20 mg/kg). After 8 weeks of treatment, blood glucose and triglycerides are measured, significantly lower in animals treated with either Compound BI or rosiglitazone, compared to vehicle-treated controls. The rosiglitazone dose used in this study was reported in published literature as the optimum dose for late stage db/db mice (Lenhard et al., (1999) Diabetologia 42:545- 54). Groups consist of 6-8 mice each.
EXAMPLE I: Antidiabetic effects of compounds of the invention in db/db mice.
db/db mice have a defect in leptin signaling, leading to hyperphagia, obesity and diabetes. Moreover, unlike ob/ob mice on a C57BL/6J background, db/db mice on a C57BL/KS background undergo failure of their insulin-producing pancreatic islet β cells, resulting in progression from hyperinsulinemia (associated with peripheral insulin resistance) to hypoinsulinemic diabetes.
Male obese (db/db homozygote) C57BL/Ksola mice approximately 8 weeks of age, are obtained from Jackson Labs (Bar Harbor, ME) and randomly assigned into groups of 5 - 7 animals such that the body weights (50 -55 g) and serum glucose levels (>300 mg/dl in fed state) are similar between groups; male lean (db/+ heterozygote) mice serve as cohort controls. A minimum of 7 days is allowed for adaptation after arrival. All animals are maintained under controlled temperature (23 0C), relative humidity (50 ± 5 %) and light (7:00 — 19:00), and allowed free access to standard chow (Formulab Diet 5008, Quality Lab Products, Elkridge, MD) and water. Treatment cohorts are given daily oral doses of (1% hydroxypropylπ compound of the invention (100 mg/kg) for 2 weeks. At the end of the treatment period 100 μl of venous blood is withdrawn in a heparinized capillary tube from the retro-orbital sinus of db/db mice for serum chemistry analysis.
Effects of compounds of the invention on nonfasting blood glucose and on serum triglycerides and free fatty acids are measured.
EXAMPLE J: Attenuation of cataractogenesis of compounds of the invention in Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) rats
Cataracts are one of the leading causes of progressive vision decline and blindness associated with ageing and diabetes, and the Zucker diabetic fatty (ZDF) model has many similarities with human cataractogenesis, including biochemical changes and oxidative stress in the lens. These rats, however, undergo cataractogenesis typically between 14 —16 weeks of age.
Male ZDF rats and their aged-match Zucker lean (ZL) counterparts (fa/+ or +/+) are obtained from Genetic Models, Inc. (Indianapolis, IN) aged 12 weeks and acclimatized for 1 week prior to study. All animals are maintained under controlled temperature (23 0C), relative humidity (50 ± 5 %) and light (7:00 - 19:00), and allowed free access to standard chow (Formulab Diet 5008, Quality Lab Products, Elkridge, MD) and tap water ad libitum. Treatment cohorts are given a daily oral dose of vehicle and 100 mg/kg of a compound of the invention for 10 weeks. Body weights and blood glucose are routinely determined (once a week, usually around 10:00 A.M.) from tail bleeds with glucose test strips and a Glucometer Elite XL device (Bayer Corporation). At the end of the treatment period 100 μl of venous blood is collected (usually 10:00 A.M.) in a heparinized tube from the tail vein for serum chemistry analysis (Anilytics, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD). Serum chemistry (glucose (GL), triglycerides (TG), aspartate aminotransferase (AST), alanine aminotransferase (ALT), sorbitol dehydrogenase (SDH), and free fatty acids
(FFA)) analyses are performed on a Hitachi 717 Analyzer (Anilytics, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD). Plasma insulin is measured by an electrochemiluminescent immunoassay, ECL (Origen Analyzer, Igen, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD). The animals arc sacrificed and tissues and/or organs (lens and liver) are extirpated, weighed (wet weight) and processed for biochemical analyses. Malondialdehyde (MDA), a major product of assayed in lenses according to Ohkawa et al (1979), Analytical Biochem y^, 3^1-358).
EXAMPLE K: Lowering of circulating triglycerides, free fatty acids, insulin and leptin in high fat-fed C57B1/6J mice
The high fat-fed mouse is a model for the hypertriglyceridemia and high circulating fatty acid levels, and the insulin and leptin resistance that are found in people at risk for and with obesity, diabetes, cardiovascular disease and other disorders. Male C57B1/6J mice, approximately 8 weeks of age, are randomly assigned into groups of 6 animals. They are maintained under controlled temperature (23 0C), relative humidity (50 + 5 %) and light (7:00 — 19:00), and allowed free access to food and water ad libitum. Mice are fed a high- fat diet (diet number D12451, containing 45% of calories as fat (Research Diets, New Brunswick, NJ)) for 6 weeks. After the 6 weeks, groups of mice received either vehicle (hydroxymethylcellulose), a compound of the invention (10 mg/kg, 30 mg/kg, or 100 mg/kg) Wyl4,643 (10 nig/kg, 30 mg/kg, or 100 mg/kg) or rosiglitazone (lmg/kg, 3 mg/kg, 10 mg/kg, or 100 mg/kg) by oral gavage for an additional 4 weeks while continuing on the high-fat diet. Plasma chemistries (Anilytics, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD) are assayed after 2 weeks of drug treatments. Plasma serum insulin and leptin are measured by an electrochemiluminescent immunoassay (Origcn Analyzer, Igen, Inc., Gaithersburg, MD) after 4 weeks of drug treatments.
EXAMPLE L: Lowering of circulating triglycerides, free fatty acids, insulin and leptin in high fat-fed Sprague Dawley rats
The high fat-fed rat is a model for insulin and leptin resistance. Sprague-Dawley rats have an intact leptin system and respond to a high fat diet with hyperinsulinemia due to a downregulation of the normal insulin response in peripheral tissues such as liver, adipose tissue and muscle
Male Sprague-Dawley rats, approximately 17 weeks of age, are obtained from Jackson Labs (Bar Harbor, ME) and randomly assigned into groups of 5 - 7 animals; the body weights are similar between groups. All animals are maintained in a tempcraturc- controlled (25°C) facility with a strict 12 h light/dark cycle and are g water and food. Rats are fed a high-fat diet (diet number D 12451 (containing <4O y0 or calories as fat), Research Diets, New Brunswick, NJ) for one month prior to drug treatment.
Groups of 6 Sprague-Dawley rats are treated with a single daily dose of vehicle (hydroxymethylcelhilose), a compound of the invention (10, 30 andlOO mg/kg), or rosiglitazone (3 mg/kg) for 6 weeks while maintaining the high-fat diet. Blood samples (~100 μl) are obtained via the tail vein for serum chemistry analysis.

Claims

CLAIMSWhat is claimed is:
1. Use of a biologically active agent in the manufacture of a medicament for treatment of a condition selected from the group consisting of insulin resistance syndrome, diabetes including Type I Diabetes and Type II Diabetes, and polycystic ovary syndrome; or for the treatment or reduction in the chance of developing atherosclerosis, arteriosclerosis, obesity, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, nephropathy, neuropathy, retinopathy, foot ulceration or cataracts associated with diabetes; or for the treatment of a condition selected from the group consisting of hyperlipidemia, cachexia, and obesity; wherein the agent is a compound of the formula:
Figure imgf000056_0001
wherein
n is 1 or 2;
m is 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4;
q is 0 or 1;
t is O or l;
R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms;
R is hydrogen, halo, alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, or alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms; one of R3 and R4 is hydrogen or hydroxy and the other is hydrogen; c are =O;
R5 is hydrogen or alkyl having one, two, three, four or five carbon atoms;
A is phenyl, unsubstituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfluoromethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and perfluoromethoxy; or cycloalkyl having from 3 to 6 ring carbon atoms wherein the cycloalkyl is unsubstituted or one or two ring carbons are independently mono-substituted by methyl or ethyl; or a 5 or 6 membered heteroaromatic ring having 1 or 2 ring heteroatoms selected from N, S and O and the heteroaromatic ring is covalently bound to the remainder of the compound of formula I by a ring carbon;
or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt of the compound.
2. The use of claim 1, wherein n is 1; q is 0; t is 0; R2 is hydrogen; R5 is hydrogen; m is 0, 2 or 4; and
A is phenyl, unsubstituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfluoromethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and perfluoromethoxy.
3. The use of claim 2, wherein A is 2,6-dimethylphenyl.
4. The use of claim 3, wherein R3 is hydrogen and R4 is hydrogen.
5. The use of claim 4, wherein the compound is 4-(3-(2,6- Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-butan- 1 -ol .
6. The use of claim 3, wherein one of R3 and R4 is hydroxy and the other is hydrogen.
7. The use of claim 6, wherein the compound is 4-(3-(2,6- Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-4-hydroxybutan- 1 -ol.
8. The use of claim 3, wherein R3 and R4 together are ==O.
9. The use of claim 8, wherein the compound is l-(3-(2,6- Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-4-hydroxybutan-l-one.
10. The use of any one of claims 1 to 9, wherein the medicament is formulated for oral administration.
11. A method for treating a mammalian subject with a condition selected from the group consisting of insulin resistance syndrome, diabetes, polycystic ovary syndrome, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, cachexia, obesity, atherosclerosis and arteriosclerosis comprising administering to the subject an amount of a biologically active agent, wherein the agent is a compound of the formula:
Figure imgf000058_0001
wherein
n is 1 or 2;
m is O, 1, 2, 3, or 4;
is 0 or 1;
is 0 or 1;
R is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms; R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, or ; to 3 carbon atoms;
one of R3 and R4 is hydrogen or hydroxy and the other is hydrogen; or R3 and R4 together are=O;
R5 is hydrogen or alkyl having one, two, three, four or five carbon atoms;
A is phenyl, unsubstituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfiuoromethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and pcrfluoromcthoxy; or cycloalkyl having from 3 to 6 ring carbon atoms wherein the cycloalkyl is unsubstituted or one or two ring carbons are independently mono-substituted by methyl or ethyl; or a 5 or 6 membered heteroaromatic ring having 1 or 2 ring heteroatoms selected from N, S and O and the heteroaromatic ring is covalently bound to the remainder of the compound of formula I by a ring carbon;
or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt of the compound.
12. The method of claim 1, wherein n is 1; q is 0; t is 0; R2 is hydrogen; R5 is hydrogen; m is 0, 2 or 4; and
A is phenyl, unsubstituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfluoromethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and perfluoromethoxy.
13. The method of claim 12, wherein A is 2,6-dimethylphenyl.
14. The method of claim 13, wherein R3 is hydrogen and R4 is hydrogen.
15. The method of claim 14, wherein the compound is 4-(3-(2,6- Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-butan-l-ol.
16. The method of claim 13, wherein one of R3 and R4 is hydrox; hydrogen.
17. The method of claim 16, wherein the compound is 4-(3-(2,6- Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-4-hydroxybutan-l-ol.
18. The method of claim 13, wherein R3 and R4 together are =O.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein the compound is l-(3-(2,6- Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-4-hydroxybutan-l-one.
20. The method of any one of claims 11 to 19, wherein the subject is a human.
21. The method of claim 20, wherein the agent is administered orally in an amount from one milligram to four hundred milligrams per day.
22. The method of claim 11, wherein the condition is insulin resistance syndrome or Type II Diabetes.
23. The method of claim 11 , wherein the treatment reduces a symptom of diabetes or the chances of developing a symptom of diabetes, wherein the symptom is selected from the group consisting of: atherosclerosis, obesity, hypertension, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, nephropathy, neuropathy, retinopathy, foot ulceration and cataracts, associated with diabetes.
24. A pharmaceutical composition for use in the treatment of a condition selected from the group consisting of insulin resistance syndrome, diabetes, polycystic ovary syndrome, hyperlipidemia, fatty liver disease, cachexia, obesity, atherosclerosis, arteriosclerosis and adapted for oral administration, comprising a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier and from one milligram to four hundred milligrams of a biologically active agent, wherein the agent is a compound of the formula:
Figure imgf000061_0001
wherein
n is 1 or 2;
m is 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4;
q is 0 or 1 ;
t is 0 or 1 ;
R1 is alfcyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms;
R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms, or alkoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms;
one of R and R is hydrogen or hydroxy and the other is hydrogen; or R and R together are=O;
R5 is hydrogen or alkyl having one, two, three, four or five carbon atoms;
A is phenyl, unsubstituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfluoromethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and perfluoromethoxy; or cycloalkyl having from 3 to 6 ring carbon atoms wherein the cycloalkyl is unsubstituted or one or two ring carbons are independently mono-substituted by methyl or ethyl; or a 5 or 6 membered heteroaromatic ring having 1 or 2 ring het from N7 S and O and the heteroaromatic ring is covalently bound to the remainder of the compound of formula I by a ring carbon;
or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt of the compound.
25. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 24, wherein n is 1; q is 0; t is 0; R2 is hydrogen; R5 is hydrogen; m is 0, 2 or 4; and
A is phenyl, unsubstituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfluoromethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and perfluoromethoxy.
26. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 25, wherein A is 2,6-dimethylphenyl.
27. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 26, wherein R3 is hydrogen and R4 is hydrogen.
28. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 27, wherein the compound is 4-(3-(2,6- Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-butan-l-ol.
29. The pharmaceutical composition t of claim 26, wherein one of R and R is hydroxy and the other is hydrogen.
30. The pharmaceutical composition of claim.29, wherein the compound is 4-(3-(2,6- Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-4-hydroxybutan- 1 -ol.
31. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 26, wherein R3 and R4 together are =O.
32. The pharmaceutical composition of claim 31, wherein the compound is l-(3-(2,6- Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-4-hydroxybutan-l-one.
33. The pharmaceutical composition of any one of claims 24 to 32 in oral dosage form.
34. A compound of the formula:
Figure imgf000063_0001
wherein
n is 1 or 2;
m is 0, 1, 2, 3, or 4;
q is 0 or 1 ;
t is 0 or 1 ;
R1 is alkyl having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms;
R2 is hydrogen, halo, alkyl having from ϊ to 3 carbon atoms, or allcoxy having from 1 to 3 carbon atoms;
one of R and R is hydrogen or hydroxy and the other is hydrogen; or R 3 a „„nd4 r R>4 . together are =O;
R5 is hydrogen or alkyl having one, two, three, four or five carbon atoms;
A is phenyl, unsubstituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfluoromethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and perfhioromethoxy; or cycloalkyl having from 3 to 6 ring carbon atoms wherein the cycloalkyl is unsubstituted or one or two ring carbons are independently mono-substituted by methyl or ethyl; or a 5 or 6 membered heteroaromatic ring having 1 or 2 ring he from N, S and O and the heteroaromatic ring is covalently bounα io τne remainder of the compound of formula I by a ring carbon;
or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt of the compound.
35. The compound or salt of claim 34, wherein n is 1 ; q is 0; t is 0; R2 is hydrogen; R5 is hydrogen; m is 0, 2 or 4; and
A is phenyl, unsubstituted or substituted by 1 or 2 groups selected from: halo, hydroxy, alkyl having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, perfluoromethyl, alkoxy having 1 or 2 carbon atoms, and perfluoromethoxy.
36. The compound or salt of claim 31, wherein A is 2,6-dimethylphenyl.
37. The compound or salt of claim 36, wherein R3 is hydrogen and R4 is hydrogen.
38. The compound or salt of claim 37, wherein the compound is 4-(3~(2,6- Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-butan- 1 -ol.
39. The compound or salt of claim 36, wherein one of R3 and R4 is hydroxy and the other is hydrogen.
40. The compound or salt of claim 39, wherein the compound is 4-(3-(2,6- Dimethylbenzyloxy)phenyl)-4-hydroxybutan-l-ol.
41. The compound or salt of claim 36, wherein R3 and R4 together are =O.
42. The compound or salt of claim 41, wherein the compound is l-(3-(2,6- Dimethylben2yloxy)phenyl)-4-hydroxybutan-l-one.
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