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Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. · Jun 2007
Heterocyclic substituted cantharidin and norcantharidin analogues--synthesis, protein phosphatase (1 and 2A) inhibition, and anti-cancer activity.
- Timothy A Hill, Scott G Stewart, Benjamin Sauer, Jayne Gilbert, Stephen P Ackland, Jennette A Sakoff, and Adam McCluskey.
- Department of Chemistry, School of Environmental and Life Sciences, The University of Newcastle, Callaghan, NSW 2308, Australia.
- Bioorg. Med. Chem. Lett. 2007 Jun 15; 17 (12): 3392-7.
AbstractNorcantharidin (3) is a potent PP1 (IC(50)=9.0+/-1.4 microM) and PP2A (IC(50)=3.0+/-0.4 microM) inhibitor with 3-fold PP2A selectivity and induces growth inhibition (GI(50) approximately 45 microM) across a range of human cancer cell lines including those of colorectal (HT29, SW480), breast (MCF-7), ovarian (A2780), lung (H460), skin (A431), prostate (DU145), neuroblastoma (BE2-C), and glioblastoma (SJ-G2) origin. Until now limited modifications to the parent compound have been tolerated. Surprisingly, simple heterocyclic half-acid norcantharidin analogues are more active than the original lead compound, with the morphilino-substituted (9) being a more potent (IC(50)=2.8+/-0.10 microM) and selective (4.6-fold) PP2A inhibitor with greater in vitro cytotoxicity (GI(50) approximately 9.6 microM) relative to norcantharidin. The analogous thiomorpholine-substituted (10) displays increased PP1 inhibition (IC(50)=3.2+/-0 microM) and reduced PP2A inhibition (IC(50)=5.1+/-0.41 microM), to norcantharidin. Synthesis of the analogous cantharidin analogue (19) with incorporation of the amine nitrogen into the heterocycle further increases PP1 (IC(50)=5.9+/-2.2 microM) and PP2A (IC(50)=0.79+/-0.1 microM) inhibition and cell cytotoxicity (GI(50) approximately 3.3 microM). These analogues represent the most potent cantharidin analogues thus reported.
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