Abstract

Microtubules play critical roles in vital cell processes, including cell growth, division, and migration. Microtubule-targeting small molecules are chemotherapeutic agents that are widely used in the treatment of cancer. Many of these compounds are structurally complex natural products (e.g., paclitaxel, vinblastine, and vincristine) with multiple stereogenic centers. Because of the scarcity of their natural sources and the difficulty of their partial or total synthesis, as well as problems related to their bioavailability, toxicity, and resistance, there is an urgent need for novel microtubule binding agents that are effective for treating cancer but do not have these disadvantages. In the present work, our lead discovery effort toward less structurally complex synthetic compounds led to the discovery of a series of acridinones inspired by the structure of podophyllotoxin, a natural product with important microtubule assembly inhibitory activity, as novel mechanism-based tubulin assembly inhibitors with potent anticancer properties and low toxicity. The compounds were evaluated in vitro by wound healing assays employing the metastatic and triple negative breast cancer cell line MDA-MB-231. Four compounds with IC50 values between 0.294 and 1.7 μM were identified. These compounds showed selective cytotoxicity against MDA-MB-231 and DU-145 cancer cell lines and promoted cell cycle arrest in G2/M phase and apoptosis. Consistent with molecular modeling results, the acridinones inhibited tubulin assembly in in vitro polymerization assays with IC50 values between 0.9 and 13 μM. Their binding to the colchicine-binding site of tubulin was confirmed through competitive assays.

Highlights

  • Microtubules are cytoskeletal protein polymers involved in essential cellular processes such as cell migration, intracellular transport and mitosis

  • Based on our early molecular modeling investigations, we explored the versatility of this reaction by synthesizing a collection of compounds employing naphthylamines, aromatic aldehydes and 1,3-cyclohexanedione as building blocks to verify the effects of ring expansion to a 6-member ring and substitution of the heteroatom oxygen by a methylene (-CH2-) group (S2 Fig.)

  • Development of new microtubule-interacting agents is needed because drugs that target microtubules are not efficient for treating all cancers and their efficacy has been limited by the development of drug resistance

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Summary

Introduction

Microtubules are cytoskeletal protein polymers involved in essential cellular processes such as cell migration, intracellular transport and mitosis. They are a dynamic system composed of α and β tubulin heterodimers, which are assembled in the so-called fast-growing plus-end and disassembled from the slow-growing minus-end [1,2,3,4,5,6]. Discovery of Mechanism-Based Tubulin Assembly Inhibitors with Anticancer Activity

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