Literature DB >> 15911312

Potent antitumor 9-anilinoacridines bearing an alkylating N-mustard residue on the anilino ring: synthesis and biological activity.

Valeriy A Bacherikov1, Ting-Chao Chou, Hua-Jin Dong, Xiuguo Zhang, Ching-Huang Chen, Yi-Wen Lin, Tsong-Jen Tsai, Rong-Zau Lee, Leroy F Liu, Tsann-Long Su.   

Abstract

A series of N-mustard derivatives of 9-anilinoacridine was synthesized for antitumor and structure-activity relationship studies. The alkylating N-mustard residue was linked to the C-3' or C-4' position of the anilino ring with an O-ethylene (O-C(2)), O-butylene (O-C(4)), and methylene (C(1)) spacer. All of the new N-mustard derivatives exhibited significant cytotoxicity in inhibiting human lymphoblastic leukemic cells (CCRF-CEM) in culture. Of these agents, (3-(acridin-9-ylamino)-5-{2-[bis (2-chloroethyl)amino]ethoxy}phenyl)methanol (10) was subjected to antitumor studies, resulting in an approximately 100-fold more potent effect than its parent analogue 3-(9-acridinylamino)-5-hydroxymethylaniline (AHMA) in inhibiting the growth of human lymphoblastic leukemic cells (CCRF-CEM) in vitro. This agent did not exhibit cross-resistance against vinblastine-resistant (CCRF-CEM/VBL) or Taxol-resistant (CCRF-CEM/Taxol) cells. Remarkably, the therapeutic effect of 10 at a dose as low as one tenth of the Taxol therapeutic dose [i.e., 1-2mg/kg (Q3Dx7) or 3mg/kg (Q4Dx5); intravenous injection] on nude mice bearing human breast carcinoma MX-1 xenografts resulted in complete tumor remission in two out of three mice. Furthermore, 10 yielded xenograft tumor suppression of 81-96% using human T-cell acute lymphoblastic leukemia CCRF-CEM, colon carcinoma HCT-116, and ovarian adenocarcinoma SK-OV-3 tumor models.

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Year:  2005        PMID: 15911312     DOI: 10.1016/j.bmc.2005.03.057

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Bioorg Med Chem        ISSN: 0968-0896            Impact factor:   3.641


  4 in total

1.  2,2'-(3,5-Dinitro-benzyl-imino)diethanol.

Authors:  Gul S Khan; George R Clark; David Barker
Journal:  Acta Crystallogr Sect E Struct Rep Online       Date:  2008-06-13

2.  Enhancement of radiosensitivity in human glioblastoma cells by the DNA N-mustard alkylating agent BO-1051 through augmented and sustained DNA damage response.

Authors:  Pei-Ming Chu; Shih-Hwa Chiou; Tsann-Long Su; Yi-Jang Lee; Li-Hsin Chen; Yi-Wei Chen; Sang-Hue Yen; Ming-Teh Chen; Ming-Hsiung Chen; Yang-Hsin Shih; Pang-Hsien Tu; Hsin-I Ma
Journal:  Radiat Oncol       Date:  2011-01-19       Impact factor: 3.481

3.  Synthesis and Preliminary Evaluation of a 2-Oxoquinoline Carboxylic Acid Derivative for PET Imaging the Cannabinoid Type 2 Receptor.

Authors:  Linjing Mu; Roger Slavik; Adrienne Müller; Kasim Popaj; Stjepko Cermak; Markus Weber; Roger Schibli; Stefanie D Krämer; Simon M Ametamey
Journal:  Pharmaceuticals (Basel)       Date:  2014-03-06

4.  A Low-Toxicity DNA-Alkylating N-Mustard-Quinoline Conjugate with Preferential Sequence Specificity Exerts Potent Antitumor Activity Against Colorectal Cancer.

Authors:  Tai-Lin Chen; Yi-Wen Lin; Yan-Bo Chen; Jing-Jer Lin; Tsann-Long Su; Chia-Ning Shen; Te-Chang Lee
Journal:  Neoplasia       Date:  2017-12-13       Impact factor: 5.715

  4 in total

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