Anti-cancer drugs
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MGI 114 (6-hydroxymethylacylfulvene, HMAF) is a novel semisynthetic antitumor compound derived from the sesquiterpene mushroom toxin illudin S. Although illudins did not demonstrate significant activity as antiproliferative agents in tumor-bearing animals, several properties including its potent inhibition of DNA synthesis and a unique interaction with DNA led to a structure-activity-based synthetic effort to obtain analogs with improved therapeutic potential. MGI 114 was selected for further development based on its antitumor activity in numerous preclinical tests. ⋯ At the higher concentration tested, MGI 114 displayed substantial antiproliferative effects in the range of 70% against tumor specimens resistant to classic cytotoxic agents including irinotecan, paclitaxel, 5-fluorouracil, cisplatin, doxorubicin and cyclophosphamide. These results demonstrate that MGI 114 exhibits a broad spectrum of antitumor activity against both adult and pediatric primary tumor colony-forming units in a concentration-dependent manner both at short and prolonged exposure duration. The substantial in vitro activity of MGI 114 at concentrations achievable in clinical trials, together with its activity against tumors resistant to classic standard cytotoxic drugs, justifies the further clinical evaluation of this unique agent.