A deficiency in apoptosis is one of the key events in the proliferation and resistance of malignant cells to antitumor agents; for these reasons, the search for apoptosis-inducing drugs represents a valuable approach for the development of novel anticancer therapies. In this study we report the first example of conformationally restrained analogues of ceramide (compounds 1-4), where the polar portion of the molecule has been replaced by a thiouracil (1, 3) or uracil (2, 4) ring. The evaluation of their biologic activity on CCRF-CEM human leukemia cells demonstrated that the most active was compound 1 followed by compound 2 (mean 50% inhibition of cell proliferation [IC(50)] 1.7 and 7.9 microM, respectively), while compounds 3 and 4 were inactive, as were uracil, thiouracil, and 5,6-dimethyluracil, the pyrimidine moieties of compounds 1-4. For comparison, the IC(50) of the reference substance, the cell-permeable C2-ceramide, was 31.6 microM. Compounds 1 and 2 and C2-ceramide were able to trigger apoptosis, as shown by the occurrence of DNA and nuclear fragmentation, and to release cytochrome c from treated cells. The treatment of female CD-1 nu/nu athymic mice bearing a WiDr human colon xenograft with the most active compound 1 at 2, 10, 50, and 200 mg/kg ip daily for 10 days resulted in an antitumor effect that was equivalent at 50 mg/kg or superior (200 mg/kg) to that of cyclophosphamide, 20 mg/kg ip daily, delivered on the same schedule, with markedly lower systemic toxicity. In conclusion, the present study demonstrates that the new ceramide analogues 1 and 2 are characterized by in vitro and in vivo antitumor activity and low toxicity.
Design, synthesis, and characterization of the antitumor activity of novel ceramide analogues
MACCHIA, MARCO;BERTINI, SIMONE;DI BUSSOLO, VALERIA;FOGLI, STEFANO;MINUTOLO, FILIPPO;DANESI, ROMANO
2001-01-01
Abstract
A deficiency in apoptosis is one of the key events in the proliferation and resistance of malignant cells to antitumor agents; for these reasons, the search for apoptosis-inducing drugs represents a valuable approach for the development of novel anticancer therapies. In this study we report the first example of conformationally restrained analogues of ceramide (compounds 1-4), where the polar portion of the molecule has been replaced by a thiouracil (1, 3) or uracil (2, 4) ring. The evaluation of their biologic activity on CCRF-CEM human leukemia cells demonstrated that the most active was compound 1 followed by compound 2 (mean 50% inhibition of cell proliferation [IC(50)] 1.7 and 7.9 microM, respectively), while compounds 3 and 4 were inactive, as were uracil, thiouracil, and 5,6-dimethyluracil, the pyrimidine moieties of compounds 1-4. For comparison, the IC(50) of the reference substance, the cell-permeable C2-ceramide, was 31.6 microM. Compounds 1 and 2 and C2-ceramide were able to trigger apoptosis, as shown by the occurrence of DNA and nuclear fragmentation, and to release cytochrome c from treated cells. The treatment of female CD-1 nu/nu athymic mice bearing a WiDr human colon xenograft with the most active compound 1 at 2, 10, 50, and 200 mg/kg ip daily for 10 days resulted in an antitumor effect that was equivalent at 50 mg/kg or superior (200 mg/kg) to that of cyclophosphamide, 20 mg/kg ip daily, delivered on the same schedule, with markedly lower systemic toxicity. In conclusion, the present study demonstrates that the new ceramide analogues 1 and 2 are characterized by in vitro and in vivo antitumor activity and low toxicity.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.