| Literature DB >> 34588796 |
Bashir Lawal1,2, Yu-Cheng Kuo3,4, Maryam Rachmawati Sumitra1,2, Alexander T H Wu5,6,7,8, Hsu-Shan Huang1,2,8,9,10.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Breast cancer is the most frequently diagnosed cancer globally, and the leading cause of cancer-associated mortality among women. The efficacy of most clinical chemotherapies is often limited by poor pharmacokinetics and the development of drug resistance by tumors. In a continuing effort to explore small molecules as alternative therapies, we herein evaluated the therapeutic potential of HH-N25, a novel nitrogen-substituted anthra[1,2-c][1,2,5]thiadiazole-6,11-dione derivative.Entities:
Keywords: HH-N25; anticancer activities; hormonal signaling; pharmacokinetic; topoisomerase inhibition
Year: 2021 PMID: 34588796 PMCID: PMC8473721 DOI: 10.2147/JIR.S329401
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Inflamm Res ISSN: 1178-7031
Pharmacokinetic Parameters of HH-N25 After an iv Injection (3 mg/kg Body Weight) in Male Sprague Dawley Rats
| HH-N25 (3.0 mg/kg, iv) | |
|---|---|
| AUC (ng/mL/h) | 2415.63 ± 256.51 |
| Tmax (h) | 0.14 ± 0.06 |
| Cmax (ng/mL) | 1446.67 ± 312.05 |
| T1/2 (h) | 4.51 ± 0.27 |
| CL/f (mL/h/kg) | 8.32 ± 1.45 |
| VD/f (mL/kg) | 1.26 ± 0.15 |
| MRT (h) | 2.56 ± 0.16 |
Note: Data are expressed as mean ± SEM (n=3 per group).
Abbreviations: Cmax, maximum observed concentration; AUC, area under the concentration-time curve; T1/2, elimination half-life; MRT, mean residence time; CL/f, mean oral clearance; VD/f, apparent volume of distribution; f, fraction absorbed (bioavailability).
Figure 1Pharmacokinetic properties of HH-N25. (A) Chemical structure of HH-N25. (B) Time-dependent concentration of HH-N25 in plasma of male Sprague-Dawley rats after injection (3.0 mg/kg body weight, iv) to rats. Data are expressed as the mean ± SEM (n=3 per group).
Maximum Tolerated Dose (MTD) and Acute Toxicity Profile of HH-N25
| Treatment | Dose (mg/kg BW) | Initial BW (g) | Final BW (g) | BW Gain (%) | Clinical Observations (BALB/c Nude Mice) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 60 | 18.04±2.34 | 19.04±2.24 | 5.55±0.45 | Severe writhing, decreases in spontaneous activity, abdominal tone, and deep respiration 30 min after treatment | |
| HH-N25 (NSC772867) | 30 | 19.04±1.15 | 19.52±1.24 | 2.45±0.02 | Severe writhing, decreases in spontaneous activity, abdominal tone, and deep respiration 30 min after treatment |
| 20 | 24.03±0.35 | 24.95±0.24 | 3.68±0.34 | Moderate writhing, decreases in spontaneous activity and deep respiration 30 min after treatment | |
| 10 | 20.04±0.67 | 21.05±0.35 | 4.79±0.53 | Slight writhing, decreases in spontaneous activity and deep respiration | |
| 5 | 21.03±0.90 | 21.98±0.24 | 4.32±0.93 | None |
Abbreviation: BW, body weight.
Figure 2In vitro anti-breast cancer activity of HH-N25. (A) Antiproliferative activities of HH-N25 against NCI60 human cancer cell lines. The percentage growth inhibition of each cell line relative to the mean is represented by values under 100, whereas those values below 0 indicate cell death. (B) Line graph showing the effect of HH-N25 on the viability of breast cancer cell lines. (C) 50% inhibitory concentration (IC50) values of HH-N25 against a panel of breast cancer cell lines. (D) NCI standard anticancer agent shared similar anticancer fingerprints and mechanistic correlations with HH-N25.
Figure 3Topoisomerase inhibition activities of HH-N25. Effect of a single dose of HH-N25 on (A) DNA topoisomerase I (Top I) and (B) topoisomerase II (Top II). (C) Dose-dependent effect of HH-N25 on DNA topoisomerase I. (D) Solid surface representation of the binding-site flap of topoisomerase 1 accommodating the ligands (HH-N25 and camptothecin) and 2D representations of ligand–receptor complexes, showing the interacting amino acid residues and the types of interactions between the ligands (HH-N25 and camptothecin).
Docking Profiles of HH-N25 with Progesterone, Aldosterone, and Topoisomerase 1 Activities
| Interaction | HH-N25-TOP1 Complex | CPT-TOP1 Complex | HH-N25-PR Complex | HH-N25-AR Complex |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ΔG (kcal/mol) | −8.3 | −8.8 | −8.4 | −9.7 |
| H-bond (distance, Å) | Lys493 (2.45) | Gly490 (2.41) | Gly683 (2.74) | |
| Thr501 (1.88) | Asn491 (1.94) | Pro682 (2.21) | ||
| Lys532 (3.44) | Thr501 (2.91) | |||
| Asp533 (3.00) | ||||
| π-alkyl | Ala499 | Ala499 | Leu929 | Ala748 |
| Arg364 | Lys532 | Ile920 | Arg752 | |
| Arg488 | Arg364 | Lys885 | Val684 | |
| Lys532 | Arg488 | Arg752 | ||
| Trp751 | ||||
| π-sigma | Thr498 | Thr498 | Pro927 | Val684 |
| Lys532 | ||||
| π-cation | Arg752 | |||
| π-π T-shaped | His881 | His714 | ||
| π-π stacked | Trp751 | |||
| π-anion | Asp533 | Asp533 | ||
| Van der Waal forces | His367 | Ser534 | Asp878 | Asn756 |
| Ser423 | His367 | Asp882 | Pro766 | |
| Gln421 | Lys493 | His888 | Tyr763 | |
| Phe361 | Gly531 | Val884 | Lys808 | |
| Gly490 | Val502 | Thr829 | Val685 | |
| Asn491 | Gly503 | Val925 | Val715 | |
| Gly503 | Ala489 | Gly923 | Gln711 | |
| Ser534 | Phe804 | |||
| Glu681 | ||||
| Pro801 | ||||
| Hydrophobic interaction (distance, Å) | Phe361 (3.71) | Arg364 (3.55) | His881 (3.65) | Pro682 (3.77) |
| Arg364 (3.67) | Arg488 (3.99) | Val884 (3.96) | Val684 (3.26) | |
| Gln421 (3.71) | Thy498 (3.72) | Lys885 (3.78) | Val685 (3.63) | |
| Ala499 (3.62) | Lys (3.60) | Ile920 (3.84) | Gln711 (3.74) | |
| Lys532 (3.60) | Leu929 (3.56) | His714 (3.75) | ||
| Val715 (3.85) | ||||
| Arg752 (3.78) | ||||
| Tyr763 (3.54) | ||||
| Pro766 (3.70) |
Abbreviations: TOP, topoisomerase; CPT, camptothecin; AR, androgen receptor; PR, progesterone receptor.
Figure 4Effects of HH-N25 on hormonal signaling in breast cancer. Dose-dependent plot of the effects of HH-N25 on (A) the progesterone receptor (PR), (B) androgen receptor (AR), and (C) mineralocorticoid receptor (MR) signaling pathways in the absence (upper panel) and presence of the respective receptors. (D) Docking profiles of HH-N25 with the (D) progesterone receptor and (E) androgen receptor.
Figure 5In vivo anti-breast cancer activity of HH-N25 in Balb/c mice. (A) Average tumor volume versus time curve shows that treatments with HH-N25 and paclitaxel significantly (p<0.001) inhibited tumor growth and the tumor burden. (B) Graphical representation of the tumor burden and ameliorative effects on HH-N25 on the tumor size. (C) Survival curve of mice treated with HH-N25. (D) Graph of body weight changes of mice; HH-N25 produced improvements in body weight gain in animals over the treatment course, suggesting no apparent systemic toxicity. *p<0.05, ***p<0.001.