A series of 7,8-dialkylpyrrolo[3,2-f]quinazolines were prepared as inhibitors of dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). On the basis of an apparent inverse relationship between compound size and antifungal activity, the compounds were designed to be relatively small and compact. Inhibitor design was aided by GRID analysis of the three-dimensional structure of Candida albicans DHFR, which suggested that relatively small, branched alkyl groups at the 7- and 8-positions of the pyrroloquinazoline ring system would provide optimal interactions with a hydrophobic region of the protein. The compounds were potent inhibitors of fungal and human DHFR, with K(i) values as low as 7.1 and 0.1 pM, respectively, and were highly active against C. albicans and an array of tumor cell lines. In contrast to known lipophilic inhibitors of DHFR such as trimetrexate and piritrexim, members of this series of pyrroloquinazolines were not susceptible to P-glycoprotein-mediated multidrug resistance and also showed significant distribution into lung and brain tissue. The compounds were active in lung and brain tumor models and displayed in vivo activity against Pneumocystis carinii and C. albicans.
The recent increase in fungal infections, especially among AIDS patients, has resulted in the need for more effective antifungal agents. In our search for such agents, we focused on developing compounds which inhibit fungal dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). A series of 25 5-(arylthio)-2,4-diaminoquinazolines were synthesized as potentially selective inhibitors of Candida albicans DHFR. The majority of the compounds were potent inhibitors of C. albicans DHFR and much less active against human DHFR. High selectivity, as defined by the ratio of the I50 values for human and C. albicans DHFR, was achieved by compounds with bulky and rigid 4-substituents in the phenylthio moiety. For example, 5-[(4-morpholinophenyl)thio]-2,4-diaminoquinazoline displayed a selectivity ratio of 540 and was the most selective inhibitor synthesized to date. Substitution in the 2- or 3-position of the 5-phenylthio group provided only marginal selectivity. 6-Substituted-5-[(4-tert-butylphenyl)thio]-2,4-diaminoquinazolines showed potent activity against the C. albicans enzyme but were equally active against human DHFR. Most of the selective compounds were also good inhibitors of C. albicans cell growth, with minimum inhibitory concentration values as low as 0.05 microgram/ mL.
Escherichia coli dihydrofolate reductase was shown to follow slow transient kinetics (hysteresis). Nonlinear reaction velocities were detected during the enzyme assay and required 10-15 min to reach a steady-state rate. The degree of hysteresis was influenced by the enzyme concentration and the order of substrate addition. Incubation of the enzyme with NADPH before addition of dihydrofolate resulted in slow initial velocities that increased up to 2-fold during the course of the assay. Increasing the enzyme concentration from 0.2 to 1 nM resulted in diminished hysteresis. NADPH-initiated reactions were linear at all enzyme concentrations tested. Certain drugs had profound effects on hysteresis. Pyrimethamine practically eliminated the hysteresis of dihydrofolate-started reactions, whereas trimethoprime augmented the non-linearities in the sense that hysteresis was detected in both enzyme- and NADPH-started reactions. The shape of these reaction tracings makes trimethoprim is not a slow-binding inhibitor when assayed under conditions that eliminate hysteresis. Contrary to this, sulfamethoxazole did not affect hysteresis or augment inhibition of the enzyme by trimethoprim. Sulfamethoxazole alone (at 6 mM) did not inhibit the hysteresis and allow reliable determinations of Ki values of both weak and tight binding inhibitors. For example, Ki values for pyrimethamine, trimethoprim, and methotrexate were found to be 214 nM, 1.3 nM, and 0.021 nM, respectively.
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