Amonafide- and elinafide-related mono and bisintercalators, modified by the introduction of a pi-excedent furan or thiophene ring fused to the naphthalimide moiety, have been synthesized. These compounds have shown an interesting antitumor profile. The best compound, 9, was 2.5-fold more potent than elinafide against human colon carcinoma cells (HT-29). Molecular dynamic simulations and physicochemical experiments have demonstrated that these compounds are capable of forming stable DNA complexes. These results, together with those previously reported by us for imidazo- and pyrazinonaphthalimide analogues, have prompted us to propose that the DNA binding process does not depend on the electronic nature of the fused heterocycle.
A series of analogues of butyrolactone I, a natural product isolated from Aspergillus terreus that selectively inhibits the CDK2 and CDK1 kinases and that has been found to exhibit an interesting antiproliferative activity, have been synthesized. Its antitumor activity has been tested. Molecular models of the complex between butyrolactone I and the CDK2 active site have been built using a combination of conformational search and automated docking techniques. The stability of the resulting complexes has been assessed by molecular dynamics simulations and the experimental results obtained for the synthesized analogues are rationalized based on the molecular models.
A novel series of mono and bisnaphthalimides was synthesized and their antiproliferative activities were evaluated against three tumor cell lines. Bisnaphthalimides 3 and 4, bearing a pyrazine ring fused to the naphthalimide system, showed activities in the order of 10(-8) microM, similar to elinafide. DNA binding properties and the ability to induce DNA damage were studied for some of the most active compounds.
(1) The zinc has little influence in the development of the dysplastic changes of the rat prostate mediated by cadmium. (2) The decrease of apoptosis has little influence in the development of dysplasia. (3) GSTP1 could play a role in the response to the oxidative stress in the dysplastic changes caused by cadmium.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.