1. Academic Validation
  2. Application of ProTide technology to gemcitabine: a successful approach to overcome the key cancer resistance mechanisms leads to a new agent (NUC-1031) in clinical development

Application of ProTide technology to gemcitabine: a successful approach to overcome the key cancer resistance mechanisms leads to a new agent (NUC-1031) in clinical development

  • J Med Chem. 2014 Feb 27;57(4):1531-42. doi: 10.1021/jm401853a.
Magdalena Slusarczyk 1 Monica Huerta Lopez Jan Balzarini Malcolm Mason Wen G Jiang Sarah Blagden Emely Thompson Essam Ghazaly Christopher McGuigan
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Cardiff School of Pharmacy & Pharmaceutical Sciences, Cardiff University , King Edward VII Avenue, Cardiff CF10 3NB, United Kingdom.
Abstract

Gemcitabine is a nucleoside analogue commonly used in Cancer therapy but with limited efficacy due to a high susceptibility to Cancer cell resistance. The addition of a phosphoramidate motif to the gemcitabine can protect it against many of the key Cancer resistance mechanisms. We have synthesized a series of gemcitabine phosphoramidate prodrugs and screened for cytostatic activity in a range of different tumor cell lines. Among the synthesized compounds, one in particular (NUC-1031, 6f) was shown to be potent in vitro. Importantly, compared with gemcitabine, 6f activation was significantly less dependent on deoxycytidine kinase and on nucleoside transporters, and it was resistant to cytidine deaminase-mediated degradation. Moreover, 6f showed a significant reduction in tumor volumes in vivo in pancreatic Cancer xenografts. The ProTide 6f is now in clinical development with encouraging efficacy signals in a Phase I/II study, which strongly supports the ProTide approach to generate promising new Anticancer agents.

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