A series of new 3'-(2-methyl-1-propenyl) and 3'-(2-methylpropyl) taxoids with modifications at C-10 was synthesized by means of the beta-lactam synthon method using 10-modified 7-(triethylsilyl)-10-deacetylbaccatin III derivatives. The new taxoids thus synthesized show excellent cytotoxicity against human ovarian (A121), non-small-cell lung (A549), colon (HT-29), and breast (MCF-7) cancer cell lines. All but one of these new taxoids possess better activity than paclitaxel and docetaxel in the same assay, i.e., the IC50 values of almost all the taxoids are in the subnanomolar level. It is found that a variety of modifications at C-10 is tolerated for the activity against normal cancer cell lines, but the activity against a drug-resistant human breast cancer cell line expressing MDR phenotype (MCF7-R) is highly dependent on the structure of the C-10 modifier. A number of the new taxoids exhibit remarkable activity (IC50 = 2.1-9.1 nM) against MCF7-R. Among these, three new taxoids, SB-T-1213 (4a), SB-T-1214 (4b), and SB-T-1102 (5a), are found to be exceptionally potent, possessing 2 orders of magnitude better activity than paclitaxel and docetaxel. The observed exceptional activity of these taxoids may well be ascribed to an effective inhibition of P-glycoprotein binding by the modified C-10 moieties. The new taxoid SB-T-1213 (4a) shows an excellent activity (T/C = 0% at 12.4 and 7.7 mg/kg/dose, log10 cell kill = 2.3 and 2.0, respectively) against B16 melanoma in B6D2F1 mice via intravenous administration.
Full details of a convergent total synthesis of the ramoplanin A2 and ramoplanose aglycon are disclosed. Three key subunits composed of residues 3-9 (heptapeptide 15), pentadepsipeptide 26 (residues 1, 2 and 15-17), and pentapeptide 34 (residues 10-14) were prepared, sequentially coupled, and cyclized to provide the 49-membered depsipeptide core of the aglycon. Key to the preparation of the pentadepsipeptide 26 incorporating the backbone ester was the asymmetric synthesis of an orthogonally protected l-threo-beta-hydroxyasparagine and the development of effective and near-racemization free conditions for esterification of its hindered alcohol (EDCI, DMAP, 0 degrees C). The coupling sites were chosen to maximize the convergency of the synthesis including that of the three subunits, to prevent late stage racemization of carboxylate-activated phenylglycine-derived residues, and to enlist beta-sheet preorganization of an acyclic macrocyclization substrate for 49-membered ring closure. By altering the order of final couplings, two macrocyclization sites, Phe(9)-d-Orn(10) and Gly(14)-Leu(15), were examined. Macrocyclization at the highly successful Phe(9)-d-Orn(10) site (89%) may benefit from both beta-sheet preorganization as well as closure at a d-amine terminus within the confines of a beta-turn at the end of the H-bonded antiparallel beta-strands. A more modest, but acceptable macrocyclization reaction at the Gly(14)-Leu(15) site (40-50%) found at the other end of the H-bonded antiparallel beta-strands within a small flexible loop may also benefit from preorganization of the cyclization substrate, is conducted on a substrate incapable of competitive racemization, and accommodates the convergent preparation of analogues bearing depsipeptide modifications. Deliberate late-stage incorporation of the subunit bearing the labile depsipeptide ester and a final stage Asn(1) side-chain introduction provides future access to analogues of the aglycons which themselves are equally potent or more potent than the natural products in antimicrobial assays.
The MET receptor tyrosine kinase has emerged as an important target for the development of novel cancer therapeutics. Activation of MET by mutation or gene amplification has been linked to kidney, gastric, and lung cancers. In other cancers, such as glioblastoma, autocrine activation of MET has been demonstrated. Several classes of ATP-competitive inhibitor have been described, which inhibit MET but also other kinases. Here, we describe SGX523, a novel, ATP-competitive kinase inhibitor remarkable for its exquisite selectivity for MET. SGX523 potently inhibited MET with an IC 50 of 4 nmol/L and is >1,000-fold selective versus the >200-fold selectivity of other protein kinases tested in biochemical assays. Crystallographic study revealed that SGX523 stabilizes MET in a unique inactive conformation that is inaccessible to other protein kinases, suggesting an explanation for the selectivity. SGX523 inhibited MET-mediated signaling, cell proliferation, and cell migration at nanomolar concentrations but had no effect on signaling dependent on other protein kinases, including the closely related RON, even at micromolar concentrations. SGX523 inhibition of MET in vivo was associated with the dose-dependent inhibition of growth of tumor xenografts derived from human glioblastoma and lung and gastric cancers, confirming the dependence of these tumors on MET catalytic activity. Our results show that SGX523 is the most selective inhibitor of MET catalytic activity described to date and is thus a useful tool to investigate the role of MET kinase in cancer without the confounding effects of promiscuous protein kinase inhibition. [Mol Cancer Ther 2009;8(12):3181-90]
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