4.6 Article

Novel Selective Estrogen Receptor Ligand Conjugates Incorporating Endoxifen-Combretastatin and Cyclofenil-Combretastatin Hybrid Scaffolds: Synthesis and Biochemical Evaluation

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 22, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules22091440

Keywords

tumour targeting conjugates; selective estrogen receptor modulators; combretastatin A-4(CA-4); endoxifen; cyclofenil; estrogen receptor ligands; hormone-dependent breast cancer; apoptosis

Funding

  1. Irish Research Council for Science, Engineering and Technology (IRCSET)
  2. capital infrastructure investment from Cycle 5 of the Irish Higher Education Authority's Programme for Research in Third Level Institutions (PRTLI)
  3. Dell Ireland
  4. Trinity Centre for High Performance Computing (TCHPC)
  5. Irish Centre for High-End Computing (ICHEC)

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Nuclear receptors such as the estrogen receptors (ER alpha and ER beta) modulate the effects of the estrogen hormones and are important targets for design of innovative chemotherapeutic agents for diseases such as breast cancer and osteoporosis. Conjugate and bifunctional compounds which incorporate an ER ligand offer a useful method of delivering cytotoxic drugs to tissue sites such as breast cancers which express ERs. A series of novel conjugate molecules incorporating both the ER ligands endoxifen and cyclofenil-endoxifen hybrids covalently linked to the antimitotic and tubulin targeting agent combretastatin A-4 were synthesised and evaluated as ER ligands. A number of these compounds demonstrated pro-apoptotic effects, with potent antiproliferative activity in ER-positive MCF-7 breast cancer cell lines and low cytotoxicity. These conjugates displayed binding affinity towards ER alpha and ER beta isoforms at nanomolar concentrations e.g., the cyclofenil-amide compound 13e is a promising lead compound of a clinically relevant ER conjugate with IC50 in MCF-7 cells of 187 nM, and binding affinity to ER alpha (IC50 = 19 nM) and ER beta (IC50 = 229 nM) while the endoxifen conjugate 16b demonstrates antiproliferative activity in MCF-7 cells (IC50 = 5.7 nM) and binding affinity to ER alpha (IC50 = 15 nM) and ER beta (IC50 = 115 nM). The ER binding effects are rationalised in a molecular modelling study in which the disruption of the ER helix-12 in the presence of compounds 11e, 13e and 16b is presented These conjugate compounds have potential application for further development as antineoplastic agents in the treatment of ER positive breast cancers.

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