1. Academic Validation
  2. Potent antitumor 9-anilinoacridines and acridines bearing an alkylating N-mustard residue on the acridine chromophore: synthesis and biological activity

Potent antitumor 9-anilinoacridines and acridines bearing an alkylating N-mustard residue on the acridine chromophore: synthesis and biological activity

  • J Med Chem. 2006 Jun 15;49(12):3710-8. doi: 10.1021/jm060197r.
Tsann-Long Su 1 Yi-Wen Lin Ting-Chao Chou Xiuguo Zhang Valeriy A Bacherikov Ching-Huang Chen Leroy F Liu Tsong-Jen Tsai
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Laboratory of Bioorganic Chemistry, Institute of Biomedical Sciences, Academia Sinica, Taipei 115, Taiwan. tlsu@ibms.sinica.edu.tw
Abstract

A series of 9-anilinoacridine and acridine derivatives bearing an alkylating N-mustard residue at C4 of the acridine chromophore were synthesized. The N-mustard pharmacophore was linked to the C4 of the acridine ring with an O-ethyl (O-C(2)), O-propyl (O-C(3)), or O-butyl (O-C(4)) spacer. It revealed that all newly synthesized compounds were very potent cytotoxic agents against human leukemia and various solid tumors in vitro. These agents did not exhibit cross-resistance against vinblastine-resistant (CCRF-CEM/VBL) or taxol-resistant (CCRF-CEM/taxol) cells. It also showed that these agents were DNA cross-linking agents rather than Topoisomerase II inhibitors. Of these agents, compounds 27a and 27c were shown to have potent antitumor activity in nude mice bearing the human breast carcinoma MX-1 xenograft. The therapeutic efficacies of these two agents are comparable to that of taxol.

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