1. Academic Validation
  2. Design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of doxorubicin-formaldehyde conjugates targeted to breast cancer cells

Design, synthesis, and biological evaluation of doxorubicin-formaldehyde conjugates targeted to breast cancer cells

  • J Med Chem. 2004 Feb 26;47(5):1193-206. doi: 10.1021/jm030352r.
Patrick J Burke 1 Tad H Koch
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0215, USA.
Abstract

The anthracycline antitumor drug doxorubicin (DOX) has been utilized for decades as a broad-spectrum chemotherapeutic. Recent literature evidence documents the role of formaldehyde in the cytotoxic mechanism, and anthracycline-formaldehyde conjugates possess substantially enhanced activity in vitro and in vivo. Targeting a doxorubicin-formaldehyde conjugate specifically to Cancer cells may provide a more efficacious chemotherapeutic. The design and 11-step synthesis of doxorubicin-formaldehyde conjugates targeted to the Estrogen receptor, which is commonly overexpressed in breast Cancer cells, are reported. The formaldehyde is incorporated in a masked form as an N-Mannich linkage between doxorubicin and salicylamide. The salicylamide triggering molecule, previously developed to release the doxorubicin-formaldehyde active metabolite, is tethered via derivatized ethylene glycols to an E and Z mixture of 4-hydroxytamoxifen. The targeting group, E/Z-4-hydroxytamoxifen, was selected for its ability to tightly bind the Estrogen receptor and antiestrogen binding sites. The targeted doxorubicin-formaldehyde conjugates' Estrogen receptor binding and in vitro growth inhibition were evaluated as a function of tether length. The lead compound, DOX-TEG-TAM, bearing a triethylene glycol tether, binds the Estrogen receptor with a binding affinity of 2.5% relative to E/Z-4-hydroxytamoxifen and inhibits the growth of four breast Cancer cell lines with 4-fold up to 140-fold enhanced activity relative to doxorubicin.

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