Anticancer and Antiviral Effects and Inactivation of <i>S</i>-Adenosyl-<scp>l</scp>-homocysteine Hydrolase with 5‘-Carboxaldehydes and Oximes Synthesized from Adenosine and Sugar-Modified Analogues — Stanislaw F. Wnuk (1997) | RDL Network
Anticancer and Antiviral Effects and Inactivation of <i>S</i>-Adenosyl-<scp>l</scp>-homocysteine Hydrolase with 5‘-Carboxaldehydes and Oximes Synthesized from Adenosine and Sugar-Modified Analogues
Article 1997 en
Authors
SW
Stanislaw F. Wnuk
CY
Chong‐Sheng Yuan
RB
Ronald T. Borchardt
Abstract
1 min read
Selectively protected adenine nucleosides were converted into 5'-carboxaldehyde analogues by Moffatt oxidation (dimethyl sulfoxide/dicyclohexylcarbodiimide/dichloroacetic acid) or with the Dess-Martin periodinane reagent. Hydrolysis of a 5'-fluoro-5'-S-methyl-5'-thio (alpha-fluoro thioether) arabinosyl derivative also gave the 5'-carboxaldehyde. Treatment of 5'-carboxaldehydes with hydroxylamine [or O-(methyl, ethyl, and benzyl)hydroxylamine] hydrochloride gave E/Z oximes. Treatment of purified oximes with aqueous trifluoroacetic acid and acetone effected trans-oximation to provide clean samples of 5'-carboxaldehydes. Adenosine (Ado)-5'-carboxaldehyde and its 4'-epimer are potent inhibitors of S-adenosyl-L-homocysteine (AdoHcy) hydrolase. They bind efficiently to the enzyme and undergo oxidation at C3' to give 3'-keto analogues with concomitant reduction of the NAD+ cofactor to give an inactive, tightly bound NADH-enzyme complex (type I cofactor-depletion inhibition). Potent type I inhibition was observed with 5'-carboxaldehydes that contain a ribo cis-2',3'-glycol. Their oxime derivatives are "proinhibitors" that undergo enzyme-catalyzed hydrolysis to release the inhibitors at the active site. The 2'-deoxy and 2'-epimeric (arabinosyl) analogues were much weaker inhibitors, and the 3'-deoxy compounds bind very weakly. Ado-5'-carboxaldehyde oxime had potent cytotoxicity in tumor cell lines and was toxic to normal human cells. Analogues had weaker cytotoxic and antiviral potencies, and the 3'-deoxy compounds were essentially devoid of cytotoxic and antiviral activity.
Stanislaw F. Wnuk, Bong‐Oh Ro, Carlos A. Valdez, Elżbieta Lewandowska, Neida X. Valdez, Pablo R. Sacasa, Dan Yin, Jinsong Zhang, Ronald T. Borchardt, De Clercq Erik
Stanislaw F. Wnuk, Carlos A. Valdez, Jahanzeb Khan, Priscilla Moutinho, Morris J. Robins, Xiaoda Yang, Ronald T. Borchardt, Jan Balzarini, De Clercq Erik
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.