6533b7d1fe1ef96bd125c217
RESEARCH PRODUCT
Irreversible Inhibition of Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor Activity by 3-Aminopropanamides
Caterina CarmiSilvia RivaraSimonetta RussoFabrizio BordiFederica VacondioGabriele CostantinoAndrea CavazzoniAndrea ArdizzoniRoberta AlfieriElena GalvaniMarco MorPier Giorgio PetroniniStefania AielloAlessio Lodolasubject
AmideCell SurvivalEGFR inhibitorsQuinolineAntineoplastic AgentsAntineoplastic AgentStructure-Activity RelationshipT790MGefitinibCell Line TumorDrug DiscoveryPropionatemedicineHumansStructure–activity relationshipEpidermal growth factor receptorPhosphorylationAniline CompoundsbiologyChemistryDrug Discovery3003 Pharmaceutical ScienceAutophosphorylationQuinazolineAniline CompoundAmidesSettore CHIM/08 - Chimica FarmaceuticaErbB ReceptorsBiochemistryProtein kinase domainDrug Resistance NeoplasmQuinazolinesQuinolinesbiology.proteinMolecular MedicinePhosphorylationReceptor Epidermal Growth FactorPropionatesDrug Screening Assays AntitumorTyrosine kinaseHumanmedicine.drugdescription
Irreversible epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) inhibitors contain a reactive warhead which covalently interacts with a conserved cysteine residue in the kinase domain. The acrylamide fragment, a commonly employed warhead, effectively alkylates Cys797 of EGFR, but its reactivity can cause rapid metabolic deactivation or nonspecific reactions with off-targets. We describe here a new series of irreversible inhibitors containing a 3-aminopropanamide linked in position 6 to 4-anilinoquinazoline or 4-anilinoquinoline-3- carbonitrile driving portions. Some of these compounds proved to be as efficient as their acrylamide analogues in inhibiting EGFR-TK (TK = tyrosine kinase) autophosphorylation in A549 lung cancer cells. Moreover, several 3-aminopropanamides suppressed proliferation of gefitinib-resistant H1975 cells, harboring the T790M mutation in EGFR, at significantly lower concentrations than did gefitinib. A prototypical compound, N-(4-(3-bromoanilino)quinazolin-6- yl)-3-(dimethylamino)propanamide (5), did not show covalent binding to cell-free EGFR-TK in a fluorescence assay, while it underwent selective activation in the intracellular environment, releasing an acrylamide derivative which can react with thiol groups. © 2012 American Chemical Society.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2012-01-01 | Journal of Medicinal Chemistry |