4.7 Article

Anticancer Activity and Cellular Repression of c-MYC by the G-Quadruplex-Stabilizing 11-Piperazinylquindoline Is Not Dependent on Direct Targeting of the G-Quadruplex in the c-MYC Promoter

Journal

JOURNAL OF MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 55, Issue 13, Pages 6076-6086

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jm300282c

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Science Foundation Arizona [SBC 0016-07]
  2. National Institutes of Health [CA95060]
  3. National Foundation for Cancer Research [VONHOFF0601]

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This G-rich region of the c-MYC promoter has been shown to form a G-quadruplex structure that acts as a silencer element for c-MYC transcriptional control. In the present work, we have synthesized a series of 11-substituted quindoline analogues as c-MYC G-quadruplex-stabilizing compounds, and the cell-free and in vitro activity of these compounds were evaluated. Two lead compounds (4 and 12) demonstrated good cell-free profiles, and compound 4 (2-(4-(10H-indolo[3,2-b]quinolin-11-yl)piperazin-1-yl)-N,N-dimethylethanamine) significantly down-regulated c-MYC expression. However, despite the good cell-free activity and the effect of these compounds on c-MYC gene expression, we have demonstrated, using a cellular assay in a Burkitt's lymphoma cell line (CA46-specific), that these effects were not mediated through targeting of the c-MYC G-quadruplex. Thus, caution should be used in assigning the effects of G-quadruplex-interactive compounds that lower c-MYC to direct targeting of these promoter elements unless this assay, or similar ones, demonstrates direct targeting of the G-quadruplex in cells.

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