1 research outputs found
A-Ring Dihalogenation Increases the Cellular Activity of Combretastatin-Templated Tetrazoles
The combretastatins have been investigated for their
antimitotic
and antivascular properties, and it is widely postulated that a 3,4,5-trimethoxyaryl
A-ring is essential to maintain potent activity. We have synthesized
new tetrazole analogues (<b>32</b>–<b>34</b>),
demonstrating that 3,5-dihalogenation can consistently increase potency
by up to 5-fold when compared to the equivalent trimethoxy compound
on human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) and a range of
cancer cells. Moreover, this increased potency offsets that lost by
installing the tetrazole bridge into combretastatin A-4 (<b>1</b>), giving crystalline, soluble compounds that have low nanomolar
activity, arrest cells in G<sub>2</sub>/M phase, and retain microtubule
inhibitory activity. Molecular modeling has shown that optimized packing
within the binding site resulting in increased Coulombic interaction
may be responsible for this improved activity