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1.
ACS Cent Sci ; 9(4): 763-776, 2023 Apr 26.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37122469

RESUMO

Small-molecule prodrug approaches that can activate cancer therapeutics selectively in tumors are urgently needed. Here, we developed the first antitumor prodrugs designed for activation by thiol-manifold oxidoreductases, targeting the thioredoxin (Trx) system. The Trx system is a critical cellular redox axis that is tightly linked to dysregulated redox/metabolic states in cancer, yet it cannot be addressed by current bioreductive prodrugs, which mainly cluster around oxidized nitrogen species. We instead harnessed Trx/TrxR-specific artificial dichalcogenides to gate the bioactivity of 10 "off-to-on" reduction-activated duocarmycin prodrugs. The prodrugs were tested for cell-free and cellular reductase-dependent activity in 177 cell lines, establishing broad trends for redox-based cellular bioactivity of the dichalcogenides. They were well tolerated in vivo in mice, indicating low systemic release of their duocarmycin cargo, and in vivo anti-tumor efficacy trials in mouse models of breast and pancreatic cancer gave promising indications of effective tumoral drug release, presumably by in situ bioreductive activation. This work therefore presents a chemically novel class of bioreductive prodrugs against a previously unaddressed reductase chemotype, validates its ability to access in vivo-compatible small-molecule prodrugs even of potently cumulative toxins, and so introduces carefully tuned dichalcogenides as a platform strategy for specific bioreduction-based release.

2.
Chem ; 8(5): 1493-1517, 2022 May 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35936029

RESUMO

Quantifying the activity of key cellular redox players is crucial for understanding physiological homeostasis, and for targeting their perturbed states in pathologies including cancer and inflammatory diseases. However, cellularly-selective probes for oxidoreductase turnover are sorely lacking. We rationally developed the first probes that selectively target the mammalian selenoprotein thioredoxin reductase (TrxR), using a cyclic selenenylsulfide oriented to harness TrxR's unique selenolthiol chemistry while resisting the cellular monothiol background. Lead probe RX1 had excellent TrxR1-selective performance in cells, cross-validated by knockout, selenium starvation, knock-in, and chemical inhibitors. Its background-free fluorogenicity enabled us to perform the first quantitative high-throughput live cell screen for TrxR1 inhibitors, which indicated that tempered SNAr electrophiles may be more selective TrxR drugs than the classical electrophiles used hitherto. The RX1 design thus sets the stage for in vivo imaging of the activity of this key oxidoreductase in health and disease, and can also drive TrxR1-inhibitor drug design.

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