Abstract

A small library of N-hydroxysulfamides was synthesized by an original approach in order to investigate whether this zinc-binding function is efficient for the design of inhibitors targeting the cytosolic (hCA I and II) and transmembrane, tumor-associated (hCA IX and XII) isozymes of carbonic anhydrase (CA, EC 4.2.1.1). The parent derivative, N-hydroxysulfamide was a more potent inhibitor as compared to sulfamide or sulfamic acid against all isozymes, with inhibition constants in the range of 473 nM–4.05 μM. Its substituted n-decyl-, n-dodecyl-, benzyl-, and biphenylmethyl-derivatives were less inhibitory against hCA I ( K Is in the range of 5.8–8.2 μM) but more inhibitory against hCA II ( K Is in the range of 50.5–473 nM). The same situation was true for the tumor-associated isozymes, with K Is in the range of 353–790 nM against hCA IX and 372–874 nM against hCA XII. Some sulfamides/sulfamates possessing similar substitution patterns have also been investigated for the inhibition of these isozymes, being shown that in some particular cases sulfamides are more efficient inhibitors as compared to the corresponding sulfamates. Potent CA inhibitors targeting the cytosolic or tumor-associated CA isozymes can thus be designed from various classes of sulfonamides, sulfamides, or sulfamates and their derivatives, considering the extensive interactions in which the inhibitor and the enzyme active site are engaged, based on recent X-ray crystallographic data.

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