News Release

A better class of cancer drugs

An SDSU chemist has developed a technique to identifying potential cancer drugs that less likely to produce side effects

Peer-Reviewed Publication

San Diego State University

A Better Class of Cancer Drug

image: The left-most molecule shows an unstable atropisomer, its axis of chirality shown by the red arrow. The two on the right are stable "arrangements." view more 

Credit: Jeffrey Gustafson

SAN DIEGO (Sept. 11, 2015)--A class of therapeutic drugs known as protein kinase inhibitors has in the past decade become a powerful weapon in the fight against various life-threatening diseases, including certain types of leukemia, lung cancer, kidney cancer and squamous cell cancer of the head and neck. One problem with these drugs, however, is that they often inhibit many different targets, which can lead to side effects and complications in therapeutic use. A recent study by San Diego State University chemist Jeffrey Gustafson has identified a new technique for improving the selectivity of these drugs and possibly decreasing unwanted side effects in the future.

Why are protein kinase-inhibiting drugs so unpredictable? The answer lies in their molecular makeup.

Many of these drug candidates possess examples of a phenomenon known as atropisomerism. To understand what this is, it's helpful to understand a bit of the chemistry at work. Molecules can come in different forms that have exactly the same chemical formula and even the same bonds, just arranged differently. The different arrangements are mirror images of each other, with a left-handed and a right-handed arrangement. The molecules' "handedness" is referred to as chirality. Atropisomerism is a form of chirality that arises when the spatial arrangement has a rotatable bond called an axis of chirality. Picture two non-identical paper snowflakes tethered together by a rigid stick.

Some axes of chirality are rigid, while others can freely spin about their axis. In the latter case, this means that at any given time, you could have one of two different "versions" of the same molecule.

Watershed treatment

As the name suggests, kinase inhibitors interrupt the function of kinases--a particular type of enzyme--and effectively shut down the activity of proteins that contribute to cancer.

"Kinase inhibition has been a watershed for cancer treatment," said Gustafson, who attended SDSU as an undergraduate before earning his Ph.D. in organic chemistry from Yale University, then working there as a National Institutes of Health poctdoctoral fellow in chemical biology.

"However, it's really hard to inhibit a single kinase," he explained. "The majority of compounds identified inhibit not just one but many kinases, and that can lead to a number of side effects."

Many kinase inhibitors possess axes of chirality that are freely spinning. The problem is that because you can't control which "arrangement" of the molecule is present at a given time, the unwanted version could have unintended consequences.

In practice, this means that when medicinal chemists discover a promising kinase inhibitor that exists as two interchanging arrangements, they actually have two different inhibitors. Each one can have quite different biological effects, and it's difficult to know which version of the molecule actually targets the right protein.

"I think this has really been under-recognized in the field," Gustafson said. "The field needs strategies to weed out these side effects."

Applying the brakes

So that's what Gustafson did in a study recently published in the high-impact journal Angewandte Chemie. He and his colleagues synthesized atropisomeric compounds known to target a particular family of kinases known as tyrosine kinases. To some of these compounds, the researchers added a single chlorine atom which effectively served as a brake to keep the atropisomer from spinning around, locking the molecule into either a right-handed or a left-handed version.

When the researchers screened both the modified and unmodified versions against their target kinases, they found major differences in which kinases the different versions inhibited. The unmodified compound was like a shotgun blast, inhibiting a broad range of kinases. But the locked-in right-handed and left-handed versions were choosier.

"Just by locking them into one or another atropisomeric configuration, not only were they more selective, but they inhibited different kinases," Gustafson explained.

If drug makers incorporated this technique into their early drug discovery process, he said, it would help identify which version of an atropisomeric compound actually targets the kinase they want to target, cutting the potential for side effects and helping to usher drugs past strict regulatory hurdles and into the hands of waiting patients.

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About San Diego State University

San Diego State University is a major public research institution that provides transformative experiences, both inside and outside of the classroom, for its 35,000 students. The university offers bachelor's degrees in 94 areas, master's degrees in 78 areas and doctorates in 22 areas. Students participate in research, international experiences, sustainability and entrepreneurship initiatives, and a broad range of student life and leadership opportunities. The university's rich campus life features opportunities for students to participate in, and engage with, the creative and performing arts, a Division I athletics program and the vibrant cultural life of the San Diego region. For more information, visit http://www.sdsu.edu.


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