Literature DB >> 21103911

Desferrithiocin analogue iron chelators: iron clearing efficiency, tissue distribution, and renal toxicity.

Raymond J Bergeron1, Jan Wiegand, Neelam Bharti, James S McManis, Shailendra Singh.   

Abstract

The current solution to iron-mediated damage in transfusional iron overload disorders is decorporation of excess unmanaged metal, chelation therapy. The clinical development of the tridentate chelator deferitrin (1, Table 1) was halted due to nephrotoxicity. It was then shown by replacing the 4'-(HO) of 1 with a 3,6,9-trioxadecyloxy group, the nephrotoxicity could be ameliorated. Further structure-activity relationship studies have established that the length and the position of the polyether backbone controlled: (1) the ligand's iron clearing efficiency (ICE), (2) chelator tissue distribution, (3) biliary ferrokinetics, and (4) tissue iron reduction. The current investigation compares the ICE and tissue distribution of a series of (S)-4,5-dihydro-2-[2-hydroxy-4-(polyether)phenyl]-4-methyl-4-thiazolecarboxylic acids (Table 1, 3-5) and the (S)-4,5-dihydro-2-[2-hydroxy-3-(polyether)phenyl]-4-methyl-4-thiazolecarboxylic acids (Table 1, 8-10). The three most effective polyether analogues, in terms of performance ratio (PR), defined as mean ICE(primate)/ICE(rodent), are 3 (PR 1.1), 8, (PR 1.5), and 9, now in human trials, (PR 2.2). At the onset of the clinical trial on 9, no data were available for ligand 3 or 8. This is unfortunate, as 3 has many advantages over 9, e.g., the ICE of 3 in rats is 2.5-fold greater than that of 9 and analogue 3 achieves very high levels in the liver, pancreas, and heart, the organs most affected by iron overload. Finally, the impact of 3 on the urinary excretion of kidney injury molecule-1 (Kim-1), an early diagnostic biomarker for monitoring acute kidney toxicity, has been carried out in rats; no evidence of nephrotoxicity was found. Overall, the results suggest that 3 would be a far superior clinical candidate to 9.

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Year:  2010        PMID: 21103911      PMCID: PMC3329216          DOI: 10.1007/s10534-010-9389-y

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Biometals        ISSN: 0966-0844            Impact factor:   2.949


  57 in total

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Review 4.  Mechanism of iron toxicity.

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5.  The metabolism of iron-dextran given as a total-dose infusion to iron deficient Jamaican subjects.

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6.  Iron-catalyzed hydroxyl radical formation. Stringent requirement for free iron coordination site.

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2.  Substituent effects on desferrithiocin and desferrithiocin analogue iron-clearing and toxicity profiles.

Authors:  Raymond J Bergeron; Jan Wiegand; Neelam Bharti; James S McManis
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3.  Metabolically programmed iron chelators.

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Review 6.  Iron chelation therapy in transfusion-dependent thalassemia patients: current strategies and future directions.

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8.  Growth Inhibition of a Novel Iron Chelator, DpdtC, against Hepatoma Carcinoma Cell Lines Partly Attributed to Ferritinophagy-Mediated Lysosomal ROS Generation.

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Review 9.  Desferrithiocin: a search for clinically effective iron chelators.

Authors:  Raymond J Bergeron; Jan Wiegand; James S McManis; Neelam Bharti
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