Searching for an ideal SERM: Mining tamoxifen structure–activity relationships

Sky Price(The University of Texas at Austin), Sophie G. Bender(Reed College), Rachel Yahn(Reed College), Nicholas A. Till(Reed College), Sophia Varady(Reed College), Rebecca Lyn LaLonde(Reed College)
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters
September 27, 2021
Cited by 7Open Access
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Abstract

The repurposing of old drugs for new treatments has recently garnered increased attention in the face of new diseases and declining productivity of the pharmaceutial industry. This report draws attention to potential opportunities hiding in plain sight within the SAR of off-patent drugs. Herein we explore the untapped potential of Selective Estrogen Receptor Modulators (SERMs). SERMs are a class of molecules that have been highly influential in the treatment of estrogen receptor-positive breast cancers. However, the most commonly prescribed SERM, tamoxifen, has been found to increase the risk of endometrial cancer. Another SERM, raloxifene, does not increase incidence of endometrial cancer, but has been abandoned as a breast cancer treatment. We report the design, synthesis, and evaluation of an unexplored tamoxifen substitution pattern which mimics the geometry of raloxifene to confer its favorable pharmacodynamics. This substitution pattern was found to maintain excellent binding affinity to estrogen receptor-α.


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