Hypoxia-Selective Antitumor Agents. 13. Effects of Acridine Substitution on the Hypoxia-Selective Cytotoxicity and Metabolic Reduction of the Bis-bioreductive Agent Nitracrine N-Oxide
- 1 January 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
- Vol. 39 (13) , 2508-2517
- https://doi.org/10.1021/jm9600104
Abstract
A series of nuclear-substituted derivatives of nitracrine N-oxide (2; a bis-bioreductive hypoxia-selective cytotoxin) were prepared and evaluated, seeking analogues of lower nitroacridine reduction potential. Disubstitution with Me or OMe groups at the 4- and 5-positions did not provide analogues with one-electron reduction potentials significantly lower than those of the corresponding monosubstituted derivatives (E(1) ca. -350 mV for both the 4-OMe and 4,5-diOMe compounds). This appears not to be due to a concomitant raising of the acridine pKa but to a lack of direct electronic effect of substituents in the ring not bearing the nitro group. Conversely, placing two OMe groups in the nitro-bearing ring does result in a substantial further lowering of reduction potential (the 2,4-diOMe analogue has an E(1) of -401 mV). The mono- and disubstituted N-oxides have substantially lower cytotoxicities than the parent nitracrine N-oxide 2 but generally retain very high hypoxic selectivity. The OMe-substituted N-oxides all showed greater metabolic stability than 2 in hypoxic AA8 cell cultures, and the 4-OMe compound 6 had improved activity in EMT6 multicellular spheroids suggesting that this metabolic stabilization may allow more efficient diffusion in tumor tissue. The parent compound 2 was selectively toxic to hypoxic cells in KHT tumors in vivo and clearly superior to nitracrine itself (although only at doses which would eventually be lethal to the host). The analogues of lower E(1), including 6, were not superior to 2 in vivo, indicating that metabolic stabilization of the nitro group is not alone sufficient to improve therapeutic utility.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Bis-bioreductive agents as hypoxia-selective cytotoxins: Nitracrine N-oxideInternational Journal of Radiation Oncology*Biology*Physics, 1992
- Tumour hypoxia: challenges for cancer chemotherapyPublished by Springer Nature ,1992
- Stereoelectronic study of zetidoline, a dopamine D2 receptor antagonistJournal of Medicinal Chemistry, 1989
- Potential antitumor agents. 49. 5-Substituted derivatives of N-[2-(dimethylamino)ethyl]-9-aminoacridine-4-carboxamide with in vivo solid-tumor activityJournal of Medicinal Chemistry, 1987
- A semiautomated microculture method for investigating growth inhibitory effects of cytotoxic compounds on exponentially growing carcinoma cellsAnalytical Biochemistry, 1984
- DNA damage in HeLa S3 cells by an antitumor drug ledakrin and other antitumor 1-nitro-9-aminoacridinesChemico-Biological Interactions, 1984
- Unusual cyclization of amidine salts in the formation of quinazolonesThe Journal of Organic Chemistry, 1982
- Reactions at C-9 of Acridine Derivatives. Part XXVHETEROCYCLES, 1980
- Antiallergic activity of 2-phenyl-8-azapurin-6-onesJournal of Medicinal Chemistry, 1975
- Prephenic Acid: Properties and the Present Status of its SynthesisAngewandte Chemie International Edition in English, 1962