Design of nucleotide-mimetic and non-nucleotide inhibitors of the translation initiation factor eIF4E: Synthesis, structural and functional characterisation.
posted on 2016-11-14, 16:42authored byF. Soukarieh, M. W. Nowicki, A. Bastide, Tuija Pöyry, Carolyn Jones, Kate Dudek, G. Patwardhan, F. Meullenet, N. J. Oldham, Malcolm D. Walkinshaw, Anne E. Willis, P. M. Fischer
Eukaryotic translation initiation factor 4E (eIF4E) is considered as the corner stone in the cap-dependent translation initiation machinery. Its role is to recruit mRNA to the ribosome through recognition of the 5'-terminal mRNA cap structure (m(7)GpppN, where G is guanosine, N is any nucleotide). eIF4E is implicated in cell transformation, tumourigenesis, and angiogenesis by facilitating translation of oncogenic mRNAs; it is thus regarded as an attractive anticancer drug target. We have used two approaches to design cap-binding inhibitors of eIF4E by modifying the N(7)-substituent of m(7)GMP and replacing the phosphate group with isosteres such as squaramides, sulfonamides, and tetrazoles, as well as by structure-based virtual screening aimed at identifying non-nucleotide cap-binding antagonists. Phosphomimetic nucleotide derivatives and highly ranking virtual hits were evaluated in a series of in vitro and cell-based assays to identify the first non-nucleotide eIF4E cap-binding inhibitor with activities in cell-based assays, N-[(5,6-dihydro-6-oxo-1,3-dioxolo[4,5-g]quinolin-7-yl)methyl]-N'-(2-methyl-propyl)-N-(phenyl-methyl)thiourea (14), including down-regulation of oncogenic proteins and suppression of RNA incorporation into polysomes. Although we did not observe cellular activity with any of our modified m(7)GMP phosphate isostere compounds, we obtained X-ray crystallography structures of three such compounds in complex with eIF4E, 5'-deoxy-5'-(1,2-dioxo-3-hydroxycyclobut-3-en-4-yl)amino-N(7)-methyl-guanosine (4a), N(7)-3-chlorobenzyl-5'-deoxy-5'-(1,2-dioxo-3-hydroxy-cyclobut-3-en-4-yl)amino-guanosine (4f), and N(7)-benzyl-5'-deoxy-5'-(trifluoromethyl-sulfamoyl)guanosine (7a). Collectively, the data we present on structure-based design of eIF4E cap-binding inhibitors should facilitate the optimisation of such compounds as potential anticancer agents.
Funding
The work presented here was funded by the Association for International Cancer Research (AICR; grant reference 06-063), the Medical Research Council (MRC), and Cancer Research UK (CRUK; grant reference C18648/A10174) and was supported by the Wellcome Trust Multi-User Equipment Grants 081287/Z/06/Z and 101527/Z/13/Z. FS was supported by a Scholarship from the University of Damascus, Syria.
History
Citation
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 2016, 124, pp. 200-217
Author affiliation
/Organisation/COLLEGE OF MEDICINE, BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES AND PSYCHOLOGY/MBSP Non-Medical Departments/Molecular & Cell Biology
Version
VoR (Version of Record)
Published in
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
Publisher
Elsevier, French Société de Chimie Thérapeutique (SCT)