| Literature DB >> 29111348 |
Wang-Qing Liu1, Yves Lepelletier2, Matthieu Montès3, Lucia Borriello4, Rafika Jarray5, Renaud Grépin6, Bertrand Leforban7, Ali Loukaci4, Rachid Benhida8, Olivier Hermine9, Sylvie Dufour10, Gilles Pagès11, Christiane Garbay12, Françoise Raynaud12, Reda Hadj-Slimane13, Luc Demange14.
Abstract
Neuropilin-1 (NRP-1) is an extra-cellular receptor for the main Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor over-expressed in tumour tissues, VEGF-A165. Consequently, NRP-1 is involved in angiogenesis and in tumour growth, and its over-expression is related to a clinical poor prognosis. NRP-1 appears as a major target in oncology, which remains poorly exploited. Herein, we report a new series of 18 small-sized fully organic VEGF-A165/NRP-1 antagonists (NRPas). These compounds share an original scaffold, including two linkers (sulphonamide and amide) and three aromatic cores. Among them, 2a (renamed NRPa-308) emerges as a promising "hit". In vitro,2a exerts not only potent anti-angiogenic activity, but also significant effects on cell viability of large panel of human solid and haematological cancer cell lines. Importantly, 2a is less cytotoxic on healthy tissues than the marketed anti-angiogenic drug sunitinib. Lastly, in a mouse xenograft model (human MDA-MB-231 breast cancer cells), 2a improves the median survival and reduces the tumour growth, but does not exert visible acute toxicity. Altogether, these results highlight its huge potential for a further "hit-to-lead" optimization, leading to new anti-cancer drugs.Entities:
Keywords: Anti-angiogenic compound; In vivo tumour growth inhibition; Neuropilin antagonists; Tumour cell viability reduction
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Year: 2017 PMID: 29111348 DOI: 10.1016/j.canlet.2017.10.039
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Lett ISSN: 0304-3835 Impact factor: 8.679