Litcius/Paper detail

Potent Hydrazide-Based HDAC Inhibitors with a Superior Pharmacokinetic Profile for Efficient Treatment of Acute Myeloid Leukemia In Vivo

Yuqi Jiang, Jie Xu, Kairui Yue, Chao Huang, Mengting Qin, Dongyu Chi, Qixin Yu, Yue Zhu, Xiaohan Hou, Tongqiang Xu, Min Li, C. James Chou, Xiaoyang Li

2021Journal of Medicinal Chemistry56 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

As “Michael acceptors” may induce promiscuous responses in mammalian cells by reacting with various proteins, we modified the cinnamamide of our previous hydrazide-based HDAC inhibitors (HDACIs) to deactivate the Michael reaction. Representative compound 11h is 2–5 times more potent than lead compound 17 in both HDAC inhibitory activity (IC50 = 0.43–3.01 nM) and cell-based antitumor assay (IC50 = 19.23–61.04 nM). The breakthrough in the pharmacokinetic profile of 11h (oral bioavailability: 112%) makes it a lead-in-class oral active agent, validated in the in vivo anti-AML study (4 mg/kg p.o., TGI = 78.9%). Accumulated AcHH3 and AcHH4 levels in tumor tissue directly correlate with the in vivo efficacy, as panobinostat with lower AcHH3 and AcHH4 levels than 11h displays limited activity. To the best of our knowledge, this work contributes the first report of in vivo antitumor activity of hydrazide-based HDACIs. The outstanding pharmacokinetic/pharmacodynamic and antitumor activity of 11h could potentially extend the clinical application of current HDACIs.

Topics & Concepts

ChemistryIn vivoMyeloid leukemiaPharmacokineticsPharmacologyHydrazideLeukemiaIn vitroCancer researchBiochemistryInternal medicineMedicineOrganic chemistryBiotechnologyBiologyHistone Deacetylase Inhibitors ResearchProtein Degradation and InhibitorsPeptidase Inhibition and Analysis