1. Academic Validation
  2. Metabolomics-assisted discovery of a new anticancer GLS-1 inhibitor chemotype from a nortopsentin-inspired library: From phenotype screening to target identification

Metabolomics-assisted discovery of a new anticancer GLS-1 inhibitor chemotype from a nortopsentin-inspired library: From phenotype screening to target identification

  • Eur J Med Chem. 2022 Apr 15;234:114233. doi: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2022.114233.
Daniela Carbone 1 Vincenzo Vestuto 2 Maria Rosalia Ferraro 1 Tania Ciaglia 2 Camilla Pecoraro 1 Eduardo Sommella 2 Stella Cascioferro 1 Emanuela Salviati 2 Sara Novi 2 Mario Felice Tecce 2 Giuseppina Amodio 3 Nunzio Iraci 4 Girolamo Cirrincione 1 Pietro Campiglia 2 Patrizia Diana 1 Alessia Bertamino 2 Barbara Parrino 5 Carmine Ostacolo 6
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Biological, Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences and Technologies (STEBICEF), University of Palermo, Via Archirafi 32, 90123, Palermo, Italy.
  • 2 Department of Pharmacy, University of Salerno, Via G. Paolo II, 84084, Fisciano, SA, Italy.
  • 3 Department of Medicine, Surgery and Dentistry "Scuola Medica Salernitana"/DIPMED, Via S. Allende, 84081, Baronissi, SA, Italy.
  • 4 Department of Chemical, Biological, Pharmaceutical, and Environmental Sciences, University of Messina, Viale Ferdinando Stagno d'Alcontres 31, 98166, Messina, Italy.
  • 5 Department of Biological, Chemical and Pharmaceutical Sciences and Technologies (STEBICEF), University of Palermo, Via Archirafi 32, 90123, Palermo, Italy. Electronic address: [email protected].
  • 6 Department of Pharmacy, University of Naples Federico II, Via D. Montesano 49, 80131, Naples, Italy. Electronic address: [email protected].
Abstract

The Enzyme glutaminase-1 (GLS-1) has shown a clear and coherent implication in the progression and exacerbation of different aggressive tumors such as glioblastoma, hepatocarcinoma, pancreas, bone, and triple-negative breast Cancer. Few chemotypes are currently available as selective GLS-1 inhibitors, and still, fewer of them are at the clinical stage. In the present paper, starting from a naturally-inspired antitumor compound library, metabolomics has been used to putatively identify the molecular mechanism underlying biological activity. GLS-1 was identified as a potential target. Biochemical analysis confirmed the hypothesis leading to the identification of a new hit compound acting as a GLS-1 selective inhibitor (IC50 = 3.96 ± 1.05 μM), compared to the GLS-2 isoform (IC50 = 12.90 ± 0.87 μM), with remarkable antitumor potency over different aggressive tumor cell lines. Molecular modelling studies revealed new insight into the drug-target interaction providing robust SAR clues for the rational hit-to-lead development. The approach undertaken underlines the wide potential of metabolomics applied to drug discovery, particularly in target identification and hit discovery following phenotype screening.

Keywords

Anticancer agents; GLS-1 inhibitors; Marine alkaloids; Metabolomics; Nortopsentin analogues.

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