A series of sulfonimidamide analogs of the oncolytic diarylsulfonylureas was synthesized and evaluated for (1) in vitro cytotoxicity against CEM cells, (2) in vivo antitumor activity against subaxillary implanted 6C3HED lymphosarcoma, and (3) metabolic breakdown to the o-sulfate of p-chloroaniline. The separated enantiomers of one sulfonimidamide analog displayed very different activities in the in vivo screening model. In general, several analogs demonstrated excellent growth inhibitory activity in the 6C3HED model when dosed orally or intraperitoneally. A correlative structure-activity relationship to the oncolytic sulfonylureas was not apparent.
Summary LY231514 (N-[4-[2-(2-amino-3,4-dihydro-4-oxo-7H-pyrrolo[2,3-d]pyrimidin-5-yl)ethyl]-benzoyl]-L-glutamic acid) is a new folatebased antimetabolite currently in broad phase II clinical evaluation. Previous in vitro studies (C. Shih et al, Cancer Res 57: 1116-1123 have suggested that LY231514 could be a multitargeted antifolate (MTA) capable of inhibiting thymidylate synthase (TS), dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) and glycinamide ribonucleotide formyltransferase (GARFT). The present study compared LY231514 with methotrexate, raltitrexed and a glycinamide ribonucleotide formyltransferase inhibitor, LY309887, at 300, 100, 30 and 100 nM, respectively, for their effects on intracellular folate and at 100, 66, 20 and 30 nM respectively, for their effects on nucleoside triphosphate pools in CCRF-CEM cells.Methotrexate induced an accumulation of dihydrofolate species, together with a rapid depletion of ATP, GTP and all of the deoxynucleoside triphosphates. LY309887 caused an accumulation of 1 0-formyltetrahydrofolate, a rapid loss of ATP, GTP and dATP, but a slower loss in dCTP, dTTP and dGTP. Both LY231514 and raltitrexed had minimal effects on folate pools. In contrast, they caused rapid depletion of dTTP, dCTP and dGTP, but induced an accumulation of dATP at different rates, with raltitrexed doing so about 2.5 times faster. Most of the observed metabolic changes could be understood on the basis of current knowledge of folate and nucleotide metabolism. We concluded that LY231514 was distinct from methotrexate, LY309887 and raltitrexed based on their metabolic effects in CCRF-CEM cells, and that in this cell line the inhibitory effects of LY231514 were exerted primarily against the thymidylate cycle and secondarily against de novo purine biosynthesis.
The metabolic formation of p-chloroaniline from the oncolytic agent sulofenur [N-(5-indanesulfonyl)-N'-(4-chlorophenyl)urea, LY186641,] and from similar diaryl-substituted sulfonylureas, and its possible relevance to the compound's toxicity, was studied. In previous studies it was found that significant amounts of metabolites such as 2-amino-5-chlorophenyl sulfate (II), which is also a metabolite of p-chloroaniline, are formed from sulofenur in mice, rats, monkeys, and humans. The metabolism of N-(4-tolyl)-N'-(2-hydroxy-4-chlorophenyl)-urea (V) was studied, and V was not found to be an intermediate in the metabolic formation of II from the sulfonylurea N-(4-tolyl)-N'-(4-chlorophenyl)urea (LY181984, III). The amounts of this p-chloroaniline metabolite (II) formed in C3H mice from a series of diarylsulfonylureas were found to correlate with the compound's propensities to form methemoglobin, one notable toxicity of p-chloroaniline. This metabolism was also found to correlate with the structure of the arylsulfonyl moiety of the sulfonylurea. Other evidence supports the hypothesis that p-chloroaniline is directly formed by metabolism of sulfofenur and similar diarylsulfonylureas as well. Metabolic formation of p-chloroaniline thus appears to be a plausible explanation for the methemoglobinemia and anemia found to be dose-limiting toxicities of sulofenur in Phase I trials.
Data collection for transplantable solid tumors has been automated with electronic digital calipers and a balance which have been coupled through an RS-232 interface to a microcomputer. BASIC programs handle data entry, calculations and data storage. A "PROTOCOL" program accepts keyboard input of sample name, notebook number, submitter and dose along with necessary information on tumor system, and then initial animal weights for treatment groups are sent from balance to computer. Data is stored as an ASCII file on floppy disks, and protocol reports are printed. When the test is to be measured, a "MEASURE" program prompts the user for keyboard entry of toxic deaths in each group. Then the computer requests input of width and length of tumors for each animal. These tumor dimensions are sent to microcomputer by pressing a button on the calipers. When a group is completed, final animal weights are sent from balance to microcomputer. Then tumor weights and percent inhibition as compared to appropriate control groups are calculated, and the data is appended to the file for that test. A hard copy is generated as tumors are measured, and reports including percent inhibition can be printed immediately after a test is measured. The data as an ASCII file is transferred via modem to mainframe computer, where another program transfers the information to a database management program. These automated procedures for tumor measurement save time and lessen the chance for error by eliminating manual recording of solid tumor dimensions and subsequent reentry of this data for calculation.
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