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Título
Promising anti-proliferative indolic benzenesulfonamides alter mechanisms with sulfonamide nitrogen substituents
Autor(es)
Palabras clave
Sulfonamides
Indole
Tubulin
SAR
Colchicine site
Antitumor
Mechanism
Resistance
Clasificación UNESCO
32 Ciencias Médicas
2302.07 Química Clínica
Fecha de publicación
2024
Editor
Elsevier
Citación
R. Fuentes-Martín, P. Ayuda-Durán, R. Hanes, L. Gallego-Yerga, L. Wolterinck, J.M Enserink, R. Álvarez, R. Peláez, Promising anti-proliferative indolic benzenesulfonamides alter mechanisms with sulfonamide nitrogen substituents. European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ejmech.2024.116617.
Resumen
[EN]Agents that cause apoptotic cell death by interfering with tubulin dynamics, such as vinblastine
and paclitaxel, are an important class of chemotherapeutics. Unfortunately, these compounds
are substrates for multidrug resistance (MDR) pumps, allowing cancer cells to gain resistance to
these chemotherapeutics. The indolesulfonamide family of tubulin inhibitors are not excluded
by MDR pumps and have a promising activity profile, although their high lipophilicity is a
pharmacokinetic limitation for their clinical use. Here we present a new family of N-indolyl-3,4,5-
trimethoxybenzenesulfonamide derivatives with modifications on the indole system at positions
1 and 3 and on the sulfonamide nitrogen. We synthesized and screened against HeLa cells 34
novel indolic benzenesulfonamides. The most potent derivatives (1.7 – 109 nM) were tested
against a broad panel of cancer cell lines, which revealed that substituted benzenesulfonamides
analogs had highest potency. Importantly, these compounds were only moderately toxic to nontumorigenic cells, suggesting the presence of a therapeutic index. Consistent with known clinical
anti-tubulin agents, these compounds arrested the cell cycle at G2/M phase. Mechanistically,
they induced apoptosis via caspase 3/7 activation, which occurred during M arrest. The
substituents on the sulfonamide nitrogen appeared to determine different mechanistic results
and cell fates. These results suggest that the compounds act differently depending on the bridge
substituents, thus making them very interesting as mechanistic probes as well as potential drugs
for further development.
URI
ISSN
0223-5234
DOI
10.1016/j.ejmech.2024.116617
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