4.7 Article

Study of Structure-Activity Relationships of the Marine Alkaloid Fascaplysin and Its Derivatives as Potent Anticancer Agents

Journal

MARINE DRUGS
Volume 20, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/md20030185

Keywords

fascaplysin; synthesis; structure-activity relationships; prostate cancer; cytotoxicity; anticancer activity; selectivity

Funding

  1. Russian Science Foundation [22-23-01009]

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We synthesized a library of fascaplysin derivatives and investigated their selectivity, effects on cells, and DNA intercalation. The di- and trisubstituted halogen derivatives showed pronounced selectivity for cancer cells, while modification of cycle C resulted in stronger activity against therapy-resistant cells.
Marine alkaloid fascaplysin and its derivatives are known to exhibit promising anticancer properties in vitro and in vivo. However, toxicity of these molecules to non-cancer cells was identified as a main limitation for their clinical use. Here, for the very first time, we synthesized a library of fascaplysin derivatives covering all possible substituent introduction sites, i.e., cycles A, C and E of the 12H-pyrido[1-2-a:3,4-b']diindole system. Their selectivity towards human prostate cancer versus non-cancer cells, as well as the effects on cellular metabolism, membrane integrity, cell cycle progression, apoptosis induction and their ability to intercalate into DNA were investigated. A pronounced selectivity for cancer cells was observed for the family of di- and trisubstituted halogen derivatives (modification of cycles A and E), while a modification of cycle C resulted in a stronger activity in therapy-resistant PC-3 cells. Among others, 3,10-dibromofascaplysin exhibited the highest selectivity, presumably due to the cytostatic effects executed via the targeting of cellular metabolism. Moreover, an introduction of radical substituents at C-9, C-10 or C-10 plus C-3 resulted in a notable reduction in DNA intercalating activity and improved selectivity. Taken together, our research contributes to understanding the structure-activity relationships of fascaplysin alkaloids and defines further directions of the structural optimization.

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