22 research outputs found

    New insights into the chemical behavior of S-oxide derivatives of thiocarbonyl-containing antitubercular drugs and the influence on their mechanisms of action and toxicity

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    International audienceThis work aims at getting more insights into the distinct behavior of S-oxide derivatives of thiocarbonyl-containing antitubercular drugs, in order to better understand their mechanism of action and toxicity. Methods Computational calculation of relative free energy (ΔΔG) of S-oxide tautomers (sulfine R–C [SO]NH2), sulfenic acid (R–C [S–OH]NH) and sulfoxide (R–C [SHO]NH) derived from thioamide and thiourea antitubercular drugs and an update of the literature data with a new point of view about how the structural features of oxidized primary metabolites (S-oxide) can influence the outcome of the reactions and be determinant for the mechanisms of action and of toxicity of these drugs. Results The calculated free energy of S-oxide tautomers, derived from thioamide and thiourea-type antitubercular drugs, supported by some experimental results, revealed that S-oxide derivatives could be found under sulfine and sulfenic acid forms depending on their chemical structures. Thiocarbonyl compounds belonging to the thioamide series are firstly oxidized, in the presence of H2O2, into the corresponding S-oxide derivatives that are more stable under the sulfine tautomeric form. Otherwise, S-oxides of thiourea-type (acyclic and cyclic) compounds tend to adopt the sulfenic acid tautomeric form preferentially. While the intermediate ethionamide-SO under sulfine form can be isolated and in the presence of H2O2 can undergo further oxidation by a mechanism yielding radical species that are toxic for Mycobacterium tuberculosis and human, thioacetazone-SO, found mainly into sulfenic acid form, is unstable and sufficiently reactive in biological conditions to intercept different biochemical pathways and manifests thus its toxicity. Conclusion Based on experimental and theoretical data, we propose that S-oxide derivatives of thioamide and thiourea-type antitubercular drugs have preference for distinct tautomeric forms. S-oxide of ethioamide is preferentially under sulfine form whereas S-oxide of thiourea compound as thioacetazone is mainly found under sulfenic acid form. These structural features lead to individual chemical reactivities that might explain the distinct mechanism of action and toxicity observed for the thioamide and thiourea antitubercular drugs

    Dendritic Pyridine-Imine Copper Complexes as Metallo-Drugs

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    International audienceSince the discovery of cisplatin in the 1960s, the search for metallo-drugs that are more efficient than platinum complexes with negligible side effects has attracted much interest. Among the other metals that have been examined for potential applications as anticancer agents is copper. The interest in copper was recently boosted by the discovery of cuproptosis, a recently evidenced form of cell death mediated by copper. However, copper is also known to induce the proliferation of cancer cells. In view of these contradictory results, there is a need to find the most suitable copper chelators, among which Schiff-based derivatives offer a wide range of possibilities. Gathering several metal complexes in a single, larger entity may provide enhanced properties. Among the nanometric objects suitable for such purpose are dendrimers, precisely engineered hyperbranched macromolecules, which are outstanding candidates for improving therapy and diagnosis. In this review article, we present an overview of the use of a particular Schiff base, namely pyridine–imine, linked to the surface of dendrimers, suitable for complexing copper, and the use of such dendrimer complexes in biology, in particular against cancers

    From natural to artificial antitumor lipidic alkynylcarbinols: Asymmetric synthesis, enzymatic resolution, and refined SARs

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    International audienceAmong acetylenic natural products, chiral lipidic alkynylcarbinol (LAC) metabolites, mostly extracted from marine sponges, have revealed a broad spectrum of biological activities, in particular, remarkable antitumor cytotoxicity. With reference to one of the simplest natural representatives, [(S)-eicos-(4E)-en-1-yn-3-ol], and a given cancer cell line (HCT116), combined extensive efforts in chemical synthesis (relying on the use of a large chemical toolbox) and biological analysis (in vitro tests), have provided systematic structure–activity relationships (SARs) where the initially selected four structural parameters appear as independent principal components: (i) and (ii) the sp/sp2 content and extent of the terminal and internal unsaturations adjacent to the carbinol center, (iii) the absolute configuration of the latter, (iv) the length of the n-aliphatic backbone. Two key criteria have also been established regarding the functional alkynylcarbinol pharmacophore: the alkynylcarbinol unit must be both secondary and terminal (i.e., substituted by a short ethynyl or ethenyl C2 group). This review is intended to provide a further illustration of the value of a simple rational approach for drug design, and to act as a benchmark for future optimization of LACs as antitumor agents

    Ethionamide biomimetic activation and an unprecedented mechanism for its conversion into active and non-active metabolites

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    International audienceEthionamide (ETH), a second-line anti-tubercular drug that is regaining a lot of interest due to the increasing cases of drug-resistant tuberculosis, is a pro-drug that requires an enzymatic activation step to become active and to exert its therapeutic effect. The enzyme responsible for ETH bioactivation in Mycobacterium tuberculosis is a monooxygenase (EthA) that uses flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD) as a cofactor and is NADPH- and O2-dependant to exert its catalytic activity. In this work, we investigated the activation of ETH by various oxygen-donor oxidants and the first biomimetic ETH activation methods were developed (KHSO5, H2O2, and m-CPBA). These simple oxidative systems, in the presence of ETH and NAD+, allowed the production of short-lived radical species and the first non-enzymatic formation of active and non-active ETH metabolites. The intermediates and the final compounds of the activation pathway were well characterized. Based on these results, we postulated a consistent mechanism for ETH activation, not involving sulfinic acid as a precursor of the iminoyl radical, as proposed so far, but putting forward a novel reactivity for the S-oxide ethionamide intermediate. We proposed that ETH is first oxidized into S-oxide ethionamide, which then behaves as a "ketene-like" compound via a formal [2 + 2] cycloaddition reaction with peroxide to give a dioxetane intermediate. This unstable 4-membered intermediate in equilibrium with its open tautomeric form decomposes through different pathways, which would explain the formation of the iminoyl radical and also that of different metabolites observed for ETH oxidation, including the ETH-NAD active adduct. The elucidation of this unprecedented ETH activation mechanism was supported by the application of isotopic labelling experiments

    Metalloporphyrin-catalyzed oxidation of sunitinib and pazopanib, two anticancer tyrosine kinase inhibitors: Evidence for new potentially toxic metabolites

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    International audienceOxidation of two tyrosine kinase inhibitors (TKIs) sunitinib and pazopanib, using a chemical catalytic system able to mimic the cytochrome P450 type oxidation, allowed us to prepare  putative reactive/toxic metabolites of these anticancer drugs. Among these metabolites, aromatic aldehyde derivatives were unambiguously characterized. Such biomimetic oxidation of TKI-type drugs was essential to facilitate the identification of low amounts of aldehydes generated from these TKIs when incubated with human liver microsomes (HLM), which are classical models of human hepatic metabolism. These TKI derivative aldehydes quickly react in vitro with amines. A similar reaction is expected to occur in vivo and may be at the origin of the potentially severe hepatotoxicity of these TKIs

    Preliminary Investigations of the Effect of Lipophilic Analogues of the Active Metabolite of Isoniazid Toward Bacterial and Plasmodial Strains

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    International audienceFive lipophilic analogues 1 –5 of the active metabolite of the antitubercular drug isoniazid (INH), selected as inhibitors of Mycobacterium smegmatis and Mycobacterium tuberculosis growth, were evaluated for their activity against Corynebacterium glutamicum (lacking in InhA activity), Escherichia coli (to test mycobacteria selectivity), and Plasmodium falciparum (as possible parasite target). Compound 3 was the only one that did not inhibit C. glutamicum growth. The poor InhA inhibitors 1 and 2 were able to inhibit C. glutamicum and their anti(myco)bacterial mechanisms of action involve targets other than InhA. For the effective InhA inhibitors 4 and 5 , also active against C. glutamicum and M. tuberculosis strains, more than one pathway should be envisaged to explain their actions. Pyridine‐base ring analogues (1 , 2, and 3 ) have no ability to inhibit the growth of E. coli even at a high concentration. Compound 3 thus exhibited a selective inhibitory action toward M. tuberculosis, while it was inactive on C. glutamicum and on E. coli growth. It presented an activity profile similar to that of INH suggesting InhA inhibition as one of the possible mechanisms of action. Finally, although a homologue of the reductase InhA exists in the FAS‐II system of P. falciparum , 3 was unable to display antiplasmodial activity
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