2 resultados para ANTITUMOR AGENTS
em BORIS: Bern Open Repository and Information System - Berna - Suiça
Resumo:
We herein describe in full detail the first total synthesis of the antitumor agents neolaulimalide and isolaulimalide as well as a highly efficient route to laulimalide. A Kulinkovich reaction followed by a cyclopropyl-allyl rearrangement is used to install the exo-methylene group. The C(2)-C(16) aldehyde fragment is coupled with the C(17)-C(28) sulfone fragments by a highly (E)-selective Julia-Lythgoe-Kocienski olefination to deliver the key intermediates of all three syntheses. Various conditions for the Yamaguchi macrolactonization are applied to close the individual macrocycles. Finally a carefully elaborated endgame was developed to solve the problem of acyl migration in the case of neolaulimalide. All compounds were tested against several cell lines. The cytotoxicity of neolaulimalide could be confirmed for the first time since its original isolation and it could be shown that it induces tubulin polymerization as efficiently as laulimalide.
Resumo:
Site-specific delivery of anticancer agents to tumors represents a promising therapeutic strategy because it increases efficacy and reduces toxicity to normal tissues compared with untargeted drugs. Sterically stabilized immunoliposomes (SIL), guided by antibodies that specifically bind to well internalizing antigens on the tumor cell surface, are effective nanoscale delivery systems capable of accumulating large quantities of anticancer agents at the tumor site. The epithelial cell adhesion molecule (EpCAM) holds major promise as a target for antibody-based cancer therapy due to its abundant expression in many solid tumors and its limited distribution in normal tissues. We generated EpCAM-directed immunoliposomes by covalently coupling the humanized single-chain Fv antibody fragment 4D5MOCB to the surface of sterically stabilized liposomes loaded with the anticancer agent doxorubicin. In vitro, the doxorubicin-loaded immunoliposomes (SIL-Dox) showed efficient cell binding and internalization and were significantly more cytotoxic against EpCAM-positive tumor cells than nontargeted liposomes (SL-Dox). In athymic mice bearing established human tumor xenografts, pharmacokinetic and biodistribution analysis of SIL-Dox revealed long circulation times in the blood with a half-life of 11 h and effective time-dependent tumor localization, resulting in up to 15% injected dose per gram tissue. These favorable pharmacokinetic properties translated into potent antitumor activity, which resulted in significant growth inhibition (compared with control mice), and was more pronounced than that of doxorubicin alone and nontargeted SL-Dox at low, nontoxic doses. Our data show the promise of EpCAM-directed nanovesicular drug delivery for targeted therapy of solid tumors.