A Novel Anticancer Stem Cell Compound Derived from Pleuromutilin Induced Necroptosis of Melanoma Cells.
Kun ZhangWei SongMingming WeiYue SunNing WangLan MaXuan YuRuolin GaoRuonan WangYan ZhangNan ZhengNing LiLinrong MuZhiwen TangXuechun LiCheng YangGuang YangPublished in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2021)
Necroptosis has been recently confirmed as a non-apoptotic form of programmed cell death. Discovery of novel chemical entities, capable of inducing necroptosis of cancer cells, is likely to act as an alternative strategy for dealing with drug resistance clinically. In this study, the identification of a novel Pleuromutilin derivative (compound 38) is presented, capable of significantly increasing the cellular level of ROS and inducing melanoma cancer cell death via necroptosis. Furthermore, compound 38 noticeably ablated various cancer stem cells and inhibited the growth of melanoma cancer cells both in vitro and in vivo. Moreover, 38 exhibited low toxicity in animal models and excellent PK properties, which is currently being verified as a potential anticancer drug candidate.