| Literature DB >> 28157593 |
Andrea Milelli1, Chiara Marchetti2, Maria Laura Greco3, Federica Moraca4, Giosuè Costa4, Eleonora Turrini5, Elena Catanzaro5, Nibal Betari5, Cinzia Calcabrini5, Claudia Sissi3, Stefano Alcaro4, Carmela Fimognari5, Vincenzo Tumiatti5, Anna Minarini2.
Abstract
Naphthalene diimides (NDIs) have been widely used as scaffold to design DNA-directed agents able to target peculiar DNA secondary arrangements endowed with relevant biochemical roles. Recently, we have reported disubstituted linear- and macrocyclic-NDIs that bind telomeric and non-telomeric G-quadruplex with high degree of affinity and selectivity. Herein, the synthesis, biological evaluation and molecular modelling studies of a series of asymmetrically substituted NDIs are reported. Among these, compound 9 emerges as the most interesting of the series being able to bind telomeric G-quadruplex (ΔTm = 29 °C at 2.5 μM), to inhibit the activity of DNA processing enzymes, such as topoisomerase II and TAQ-polymerase, and to exert antiproliferative effects in the NCI panel of cancer cell lines with GI50 values in the micro-to nanomolar concentration range (i.e. SR cell line, GI50 = 76 nM). Molecular mechanisms of cell death have been investigated and molecular modelling studies have been performed in order to shed light on the antiproliferative and DNA-recognition processes.Entities:
Keywords: Antiproliferative; DNA; Drug design; G-quadruplex; Naphthalene diimides; Telomeric DNA; Topoisomerase
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28157593 DOI: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2017.01.025
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Med Chem ISSN: 0223-5234 Impact factor: 6.514