Discovery of a Novel, Potent, Orally Active, and Safe Inhibitor Targeting Human Mitochondrial RNA Polymerase.
Xinnan LiXiaotong ZeShengnan ZhouZhaoxin HuChen HeYilin JiaLihua LiuTao WangJunda LiShengtao XuDong-Hua YangZhe-Sheng ChenHequan YaoJinyi XuHong YaoPublished in: Journal of medicinal chemistry (2023)
High oxidative phosphorylation (OXPHOS) happens in some tumors, which depends on OXPHOS for energy supply, particularly in slow-cycling tumor cells. Therefore, targeting human mitochondrial RNA polymerase (POLRMT) to inhibit mitochondrial gene expression emerges as a potential therapeutic strategy to eradicate tumor cells. In this work, exploration and optimization of the first-in-class POLRMT inhibitor IMT1B and its SAR led to the identification of a novel compound D26 , which exerted a strong antiproliferative effect on several cancer cells and decreased mitochondrial-related genes expression. In addition, mechanism studies demonstrated that D26 arrested cell cycle at the G1 phase and had no effect on apoptosis, depolarized mitochondria, or reactive oxidative stress generation in A2780 cells. Importantly, D26 exhibited more potent anticancer activity than the lead IMT1B in A2780 xenograft nude mice and had no observable toxic effect. All results suggest that D26 deserves to be further investigated as a potent and safe antitumor candidate.
Keyphrases
- oxidative stress
- cell cycle
- gene expression
- induced apoptosis
- endothelial cells
- poor prognosis
- cell proliferation
- cell cycle arrest
- anti inflammatory
- ischemia reperfusion injury
- dna methylation
- metabolic syndrome
- mass spectrometry
- pluripotent stem cells
- high resolution
- induced pluripotent stem cells
- high intensity
- high throughput
- insulin resistance
- high fat diet induced