8 research outputs found
The Other Press, February 19, 1987
<p>Energy profile (in kcal.mol<sup>-1</sup>) of face-on path for Erlotinib bioactivation by the Cpd I model of CYP3A4 and 1A2 in the gas and solvent phases.</p
Computational explanation for bioactivation mechanism of targeted anticancer agents mediated by cytochrome P450s: A case of Erlotinib
<div><p>EGFR inhibitors, even with therapeutics superiorities in anticancer, can cause idiosyncratic pulmonary and hepatic toxicities that are associated with the reactive electrophile bioactivated by Cytochrome P450s (P450s). Until now, neither has the electrophilic intermediate been caught experimentally, nor has the subtle mechanism been declared. Herein, the underlying mechanism of bioactivation mediated by P450s was explored by DFT calculations for a case of EGFR inhibitor, Erlotinib. Based on the calculation and analysis, we suggest that with other metabolites, reactive electrophiles of Erlotinib: epoxide and quinine-imine, can be generated by several steps along the oxidative reaction pathway. The generation of epoxide needs two steps: (1) the addition of Erlotinib to Compound I (Cpd I) and (2) the rearrangement of protons. Whereas, quinine-imine needs a further oxidation step (3) via which quinone is generated and ultimately turns into quinine-imine. Although both reactive electrophiles can be produced for either face-on or side-on pose of Erlotinib, the analysis of energy barriers indicates that the side-on path is preferred in solvent environment. In the rate-determining step, e.g. the addition of Erlotinib to the porphyrin, the reaction barrier for side-on conformation is decreased in aqueous and protein environment compared with gas phase, whereas, the barrier for face-on pose is increased in solvent environment. The simulated mechanism is in good agreement with the speculation in previous experiment. The understanding of the subtle mechanism of bioactivation of Erlotinib will provide theoretical support for toxicological mechanism of EGFR inhibitors.</p></div
Geometries of the transition state, intermediate and product for the rearrangement of Erlotinib-Cpd I adduct to produce epoxide, ketone and phenol.
<p><sub>S</sub> and <sub>F</sub> denote the side-on and face-on poses, respectively.</p
A Practical and High-Affinity Fluorescent Probe for Uridine Diphosphate Glucuronosyltransferase 1A1: A Good Surrogate for Bilirubin
This
study aimed to develop a practical and high-affinity fluorescent
probe for uridine diphosphate glucuronosyltransferase 1A1 (UGT1A1),
a key conjugative enzyme responsible for the elimination and detoxification
of many potentially harmful compounds. Several substrates derived
from <i>N</i>-butyl-4-phenyl-1,8-naphthalimide were designed
and synthesized on the basis of the substrate preference of UGT1A1
and the principle of photoinduced electron transfer (PET). Following
the preliminary screening, substrate <b>2</b> was found with
a high specificity and high affinity toward UGT1A1, while such biotransformation
brought remarkable changes in fluorescence emission. Both inhibition
kinetic analyses and molecular docking simulations demonstrated that <b>2</b> could bind on UGT1A1 at the same ligand-binding site as
bilirubin. Furthermore, this newly developed probe was successfully
used for sensing UGT1A1 activities and the high-throughput screening
of UGT1A1 modulators in complex biological samples. In conclusion,
a practical and high-affinity fluorescent probe for UGT1A1 was designed
and well-characterized, which could serve as a good surrogate for
bilirubin to investigate UGT1A1-ligand interactions
The group spin density (ρ) and charge (Q) distributed on the Erlotinib moiety in the addition to Cpd I, where <sub>d</sub> and <sub>q</sub> represent the doublet and quartet state, respectively.
<p>The group spin density (ρ) and charge (Q) distributed on the Erlotinib moiety in the addition to Cpd I, where <sub>d</sub> and <sub>q</sub> represent the doublet and quartet state, respectively.</p
Geometries of the transition state and intermediate for the formation of Erlotinib quinone from phenol catalyzed by Cpd I model.
<p>Geometries of the transition state and intermediate for the formation of Erlotinib quinone from phenol catalyzed by Cpd I model.</p
MOESM2 of CBFA2T2 is associated with a cancer stem cell state in renal cell carcinoma
Additional file 2: Figure S2. The Cancer Genome Atlas (TCGA) analysis. (A) Analysis of TCGA data set showing 0.4% of CBFA2T2âaltered in RCC samples
MOESM1 of CBFA2T2 is associated with a cancer stem cell state in renal cell carcinoma
Additional file 1: Figure S1. CBFA2T2 expression is elevated in RCC tissues. (A) Representative immunostaining of CBFA2T2 in normal kidney tissue. (B) Representative immunostaining of CBFA2T2 in ccRCC. (C) CBFA2T2 protein expression in RCC samples was significantly higher than that of normal kidney tissues. **p < 0.01