posted on 2015-12-17, 01:17authored byAnna E. Maciag, Ryan J. Holland, Youseung Kim, Vandana Kumari, Christina
E. Luthers, Waheed S. Sehareen, Debanjan Biswas, Nicole L. Morris, Xinhua Ji, Lucy M. Anderson, Joseph E. Saavedra, Larry K. Keefer
We
report the antitumor effects of nitric oxide (NO) releasing
derivatives of the PARP-1 inhibitor olaparib (1). Compound 5b was prepared by coupling the carboxyl group of 3b and the free amino group of arylated diazeniumdiolated piperazine 4. Analogue 5a has the same structure except
that the F is replaced by H. Compound 13 is the same
as 5b except that a Me2N–N(O)NO–
group was added para and ortho to the nitro groups of the dinitrophenyl
ring. The resulting prodrugs are activated by glutathione in a reaction
accelerated by glutathione S-transferase P1 (GSTP1), an enzyme frequently
overexpressed in cancers. This metabolism generates NO plus a PARP-1
inhibitor simultaneously, consuming reducing equivalents, leading
to DNA damage concomitant with inhibition of DNA repair, and in the
case of 13 inducing cross-linking glutathionylation of
proteins. Compounds 5b and 13 reduced the
growth rates of A549 human lung adenocarcinoma xenografts with no
evidence of systemic toxicity.