4.7 Article

Development of Novel Inhibitors Targeting the D-Box of the DNA Binding Domain of Androgen Receptor

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms22052493

Keywords

prostate cancer; computer-aided drug discovery; small-molecule inhibitors; androgen receptor; dimerization

Funding

  1. Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) [272111]
  2. Prostate Cancer Canada Translational Acceleration Grant (PCC-TAG) [TAG2014-05]
  3. Terry Fox New Frontiers Program grant (TFRI Project) [1062]

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The research focused on further developing small molecule inhibitors of AR DBD dimerization and demonstrated their improved biological activity in various assays, including mammalian two-hybrid analysis, inhibition of AR-V7 transcriptional activity, and enhanced microsomal stability. These findings provide a foundation for the development of AR inhibitors with entirely novel mechanisms of action.
The inhibition of the androgen receptor (AR) is an established strategy in prostate cancer (PCa) treatment until drug resistance develops either through mutations in the ligand-binding domain (LBD) portion of the receptor or its deletion. We previously identified a druggable pocket on the DNA binding domain (DBD) dimerization surface of the AR and reported several potent inhibitors that effectively disrupted DBD-DBD interactions and consequently demonstrated certain antineoplastic activity. Here we describe further development of small molecule inhibitors of AR DBD dimerization and provide their broad biological characterization. The developed compounds demonstrate improved activity in the mammalian two-hybrid assay, enhanced inhibition of AR-V7 transcriptional activity, and improved microsomal stability. These findings position us for the development of AR inhibitors with entirely novel mechanisms of action that would bypass most forms of PCa treatment resistance, including the truncation of the LBD of the AR.

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