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Query: EC:2.7.10.1 (
ERK
)
95,504
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Inhibition of tyrosine kinases is a possible approach for the treatment of cancer. We have investigated the catalytic mechanism of the epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase (EGF-RTK) in order to obtain information for use in structure-based searching for inhibitors. Initial rate studies imply that EGF-
RTK
forms a ternary complex together with ATP and peptide substrate. Investigation of pH and temperature dependence suggests that the kinase reaction requires the ionised form of a carboxylate (pK = 6.3) and the protonated form of another group (pK = 9.1). These characteristics are consistent with a mechanism where the carboxylate of Asp813(pK = 6.3) facilitates deprotonation of the tyrosyl hydroxyl of the peptide substrate, activating it as a nucleophile to attack the gamma-phosphorus of ATP which interacts with a protonated enzyme side-chain (pK = 9.1), possibly the guanidinium group of Arg817. This proposed catalytic mechanism was used to define a query when searching for inhibitors in a database of predicted three-dimensional structures. The procedure involved searching for compounds that mimic the ATP gamma-phosphate, tyrosyl hydroxyl and the tyrosyl aromatic ring, all of which seem to interact strongly with the enzyme during catalysis. This search allowed identification of inhibitors of EGF-
RTK
which were used to define queries for two-dimensional searching of a larger database, leading to the discovery of 4-(3-chloroanilino)
quinazoline
(CAQ) which is a potent inhibitor (Ki = 16 nM) of the enzyme. The compound is believed to be the first representative from a new structural class of anilinoquinazoline tyrosine kinase inhibitors. It follows competitive kinetics with respect to ATP and noncompetitive kinetics when the peptide is varied, implying that it functions as an analogue of ATP. CAQ is a novel and potent lead in the search for tyrosine kinase inhibitors as potential agents for the treatment of cancer.
...
PMID:Epidermal growth factor receptor tyrosine kinase. Investigation of catalytic mechanism, structure-based searching and discovery of a potent inhibitor. 808 Apr 38
A series of substituted 4-anilinoquinazolines and related compounds were synthesized as potential inhibitors of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor (Flt and
KDR
) tyrosine kinase activity. Enzyme screening indicated that a narrow structure-activity relationship (SAR) existed for the bicyclic ring system, with quinazolines, quinolines, and cinnolines having activity and with quinazolines and quinolines generally being preferred. Substitution of the aniline was investigated and clearly indicated that small lipophilic substituents such as halogens or methyl were preferred at the C-4' position. Small substituents such as hydrogen and fluorine are preferred at the C-2' position. Introduction of a hydroxyl group at the meta position of the aniline produced the most potent inhibitors of Flt and
KDR
tyrosine kinases activity with IC(50) values in the nanomolar range (e.g. 10, 12, 13, 16, and 18). Investigation of the
quinazoline
C-6 and C-7 positions indicates that a large range of substituents are tolerated at C-7, whereas variation at the C-6 is more restricted. At C-7, neutral, basic, and heteroaromatic side chains led to very potent compounds, as illustrated by the methoxyethoxy derivative 13 (IC(50) < 2 nM). Our inhibitors proved to be very selective inhibitors of Flt and
KDR
tyrosine kinase activity when compared to that associated with the FGF receptor (50- to 3800-fold). Observed enzyme profiles translated well with respect to potency and selectivity for inhibition of growth factor stimulated proliferation of human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs). Oral administration of selected compounds to mice produced total plasma levels 6 h after dosing of between 3 and 49 microM. In vivo efficacy was demonstrated in a rat uterine oedema assay where significant activity was achieved at 60 mg/kg with the meta hydroxy anilinoquinazoline 10. Inhibition of growth of human tumors in athymic mice has also been demonstrated: compound 34 inhibited the growth of established Calu-6 lung carcinoma xenograft by 75% (P < 0.001, one tailed t-test) following daily oral administration of 100 mg/kg for 21 days.
...
PMID:Design and structure-activity relationship of a new class of potent VEGF receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors. 1063 80
4-Anilinoquinazoline- and 4-anilinopyrido[3,2-d]pyrimidine-6-acrylamides substituted with solubilizing 7-alkylamine or 7-alkoxyamine side chains were prepared by reaction of the corresponding 6-amines with acrylic acid or acrylic acid anhydrides. In the pyrido[3,2-d]pyrimidine series, the intermediate 6-amino-7-alkylamines were prepared from 7-bromo-6-fluoropyrido[3,2-d]pyrimidine via Stille coupling with the appropriate stannane under palladium(0) catalysis. This proved a versatile method for the introduction of cationic solubilizing side chains. The compounds were evaluated for their inhibition of phosphorylation of the isolated
EGFR
enzyme and for inhibition of EGF-stimulated autophosphorylation of
EGFR
in A431 cells and of heregulin-stimulated autophosphorylation of erbB2 in MDA-MB 453 cells.
Quinazoline
analogues with 7-alkoxyamine solubilizing groups were potent irreversible inhibitors of the isolated
EGFR
enzyme, with IC(50[app]) values from 2 to 4 nM, and potently inhibited both
EGFR
and erbB2 autophosphorylation in cells. 7-Alkylamino- and 7-alkoxyaminopyrido[3,2-d]pyrimidines were also irreversible inhibitors with equal or superior potency against the isolated enzyme but were less effective in the cellular autophosphorylation assays. Both
quinazoline
- and pyrido[3,2-d]pyrimidine-6-acrylamides bound at the ATP site alkylating cysteine 773, as shown by electrospray ionization mass spectrometry, and had similar rates of absorptive and secretory transport in Caco-2 cells. A comparison of two 7-propoxymorpholide analogues showed that the pyrido[3,2-d]pyrimidine-6-acrylamide had greater amide instability and higher acrylamide reactivity, being converted to glutathione adducts in cells more rapidly than the corresponding
quinazoline
. This difference may contribute to the observed lower cellular potency of the pyrido[3,2-d]pyrimidine-6-acrylamides. Selected compounds showed high in vivo activity against A431 xenografts on oral dosing, with the quinazolines being superior to the pyrido[3,2-d]pyrimidines. Overall, the quinazolines proved superior to previous analogues in terms of aqueous solubility, potency, and in vivo antitumor activity, and one example (CI 1033) has been selected for clinical evaluation.
...
PMID:Tyrosine kinase inhibitors. 17. Irreversible inhibitors of the epidermal growth factor receptor: 4-(phenylamino)quinazoline- and 4-(phenylamino)pyrido[3,2-d]pyrimidine-6-acrylamides bearing additional solubilizing functions. 1075 75
Abnormal cell signal transduction arising from protein tyrosine kinases has been implicated in the initiation and progression of a variety of human cancers. Over the past 2 decades pharmaceutical and university laboratories have been involved in a tremendous effort to develop compounds that can selectively modulate these abnormal signalling pathways. Targeting receptor tyrosine kinases, especially the epidermal growth factor receptor subfamily, has been at the forefront of this effort as a result of strong clinical data correlating over-expression of these receptors with more aggressive cancers. There are a variety of strategies under development for inhibiting the kinase activity of these receptors, targeting both the extracellular and intracellular domains. Antibody-based approaches, immunotoxins and ligand-binding cytotoxic agents use the extracellular domain for targeted tumour therapy. Small molecule inhibitors target the intracellular catalytic region by interfering with ATP binding, while nonphosphorylatable peptides are aimed at the intracellular substrate binding region. Compounds that inhibit subsequent downstream signals from the receptor by interrupting intracellular protein recognition sequences are also being investigated. In the past 5 years enormous progress has been made in developing tyrosine kinase inhibitor compounds with sufficient potency, bioavailability and selectivity against this subfamily of receptor tyrosine kinases. The anti-
HER2
monoclonal antibody, trastuzumab, for patients with metastatic breast cancer is the first of these inhibitor compounds to gain FDA approval. However, preclinical and clinical trials are ongoing with a variety of other monoclonal antibodies, immunotoxins, and small molecule
quinazoline
and pyrimidine-based inhibitors. Although their cytotoxic and cytostatic potential has been proven, they are not likely to replace standard chemotherapy regimens as single-agent, first-line therapeutics. Instead, their promising additive and synergistic antitumour effects in combination with standard chemotherapeutics suggest that these novel agents will find their greatest utility and efficacy in conjunction with existing anticancer agents.
...
PMID:Tyrosine kinase inhibitors targeted to the epidermal growth factor receptor subfamily: role as anticancer agents. 1080 33
The erbB family of receptor tyrosine kinase enzymes, and particularly
EGFR
and
HER2
/neu, have become important targets for potential anticancer drugs. The substrate protein binding site theoretically is the more attractive intracellular target on these enzymes, possessing lower homology than the ATP site between different receptor kinases. However, a major breakthrough in this field was the discovery that 4-anilinoquinazolines are potent and selective inhibitors, despite binding at the ATP site. The very tight structure-activity relationships shown by these compounds suggested a clearly-defined binding mode, where the
quinazoline
ring binds in the adenine pocket and the anilino ring binds in an adjacent, unique lipophilic pocket. A unique cysteine (Cys-773) adjacent to the
quinazoline
binding site has prompted the development of irreversible inhibitors that target this residue. Three 4-anilinoquinazoline analogues (two reversible and one irreversible inhibitor) have been evaluated clinically as anticancer drugs. Data from the most advanced, the reversible inhibitor Iressa, suggest that this class of compounds may be of value in cancer chemotherapy.
...
PMID:The 4-anilinoquinazoline class of inhibitors of the erbB family of receptor tyrosine kinases. 1134 67
Since the pathogenesis of allergic diseases is associated with elevated levels of immunoglobulin E (IgE), we developed a high throughput reporter gene assay in a human B-cell line to screen for low molecular weight IgE inhibitory compounds. Monitoring the IL-4 driven IgE-germline promoter activity (IgE-GLP), we discovered 4-(1-phenylethylamino)qinazolines as potent inhibitors of IgE-germline gene expression. Testing of the individual enantiomers (1, 2) revealed that only the S(+) enantiomer 1 was active. A cell viability assay done in the same cell line in parallel discriminated the dose-dependent inhibition from a general antiproliferative effect. The observed correlation of the inhibitory potencies found in the reporter gene assay with those measured by IgE-ELISA in primary human splenocytes provided evidence that the blockade of IgE synthesis is the direct consequence of IgE-germline gene inhibition, thereby validating the reporter gene assay. Parallel synthesis in solution rapidly provided a series of analogues of compound 1 with modifications in the phenethylamine side chain and the
quinazoline
core for SAR studies. Increasing the lipophilicity of the arylalkylamine moiety yielded S(+)-4-(1-(2-naphthyl)ethylamino)
quinazoline
(6) as the most potent inhibitor (IC(50) of 14 nM) while the R(-) enantiomer was again found to be inactive. Within the set of S enantiomers, quantum mechanical calculations revealed that the IgE inhibitory activity can be quantitatively described by the charge at N-1 of the heterocyclic core and to a lesser extent by the molar refractivity. These results demonstrate the importance of electron-deficient fused 4-aminopyrimidines and lipophilic side chains for biological activity. The strong preference for the S configuration of the phenethylamine side chain is remarkable insofar as biological activity for fused 4-(1-phenylethylamino)pyrimidines has been published for the R enantiomers only (
EGFR
tyrosine kinase inhibition).
...
PMID:S(+)-4-(1-Phenylethylamino)quinazolines as inhibitors of human immunoglobulin E synthesis: potency is dictated by stereochemistry and atomic point charges at N-1. 1152 Feb 12
The epidermal growth factor receptor (EGFR) is commonly overexpressed in many human tumors and provides a new target for anticancer drug development. ZD1839 ("Iressa"), a
quinazoline
tyrosine kinase inhibitor selective for the EGFR, has shown good activity in preclinical studies and in the early phase of clinical trials. However, because it remains unclear which tumor types are the best targets for treatment with this agent, the molecular characteristics that correlate with tumor sensitivity to ZD1839 have been studied. In a panel of human breast cancer and other epithelial tumor cell lines,
HER2
-overexpressing tumors were particularly sensitive to ZD1839. Growth inhibition of these tumor cell lines was associated with the dephosphorylation of EGFR,
HER2
, and
HER3
, accompanied by the loss of association of
HER3
with phosphatidylinositol 3-kinase, and down-regulation of Akt activity. These studies suggest that
HER2
-overexpressing tumors are particularly susceptible to the inhibition of HER family tyrosine kinase signaling and suggest novel strategies to treat these particularly aggressive tumors.
...
PMID:The tyrosine kinase inhibitor ZD1839 ("Iressa") inhibits HER2-driven signaling and suppresses the growth of HER2-overexpressing tumor cells. 1158 53
The simultaneous presence of the
EGFR
and its ligand TGF-alpha in human tumor tissues suggests that autocrine TGF-alpha stimulation drives tumor growth. Here we show that autocrine TGF-alpha stimulation does cause increased tumor growth in vivo, an effect that was proven to be mediated via
EGFR
activation, and that this TGF-alpha/
EGFR
autocrine loop was accessible to an
EGFR
specific tyrosine kinase inhibitor. Clones of the
EGFR
expressing glioma cell line U-1242 MG were transfected with TGF-alpha cDNA using a tetracycline-inhibitory system for gene expression. TGF-alpha expression was inhibited by the presence of tetracycline, and subcutaneous tumors forming from cell lines injected into nude mice could be inhibited by feeding mice tetracycline. We confirmed that TGF-alpha mRNA and protein were present in these tumors and that, subsequently, the endogenous
EGFR
was activated. Tumor growth could be inhibited by an
EGFR
specific tyrosine kinase inhibitor of the type 4-(3-chloroanilino)-6,7-dimethoxy-
quinazoline
, administered daily by intraperitoneal injection, thereby interrupting the autocrine loop.
...
PMID:TGF-alpha-driven tumor growth is inhibited by an EGF receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitor. 1177 76
We have previously shown that 4-anilinoquinazolines can be potent inhibitors of vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor (Flt-1 and
KDR
) tyrosine kinase activity. A novel subseries of 4-anilinoquinazolines that possess basic side chains at the C-7 position of the
quinazoline
nucleus have been synthesized. This subseries contains potent, nanomolar inhibitors of
KDR
(median IC(50) 0.02 microM, range 0.001-0.04 microM), which are comparatively less potent vs Flt-1 tyrosine kinase (median IC(50) 0.55 microM, range 0.02-1.6 microM). The compounds also retain some inhibitory activity against the tyrosine kinase associated to the endothelial growth factor receptor (EGFR) (median IC(50) 0.2 microM, range 0.075-0.8 microM) but demonstrate selectivity vs that associated to the FGF receptor 1 (median IC(50) 2.5 microM, range 0.9-19 microM). This selectivity profile is also evident in a growth factor-stimulated human endothelial cell (HUVEC) proliferation assay (i.e., inhibition of VEGF > EGF > FGF), with inhibition of VEGF-induced proliferation being achieved at nanomolar concentrations (median IC(50) 0.06 microM). Further examination of compound 2 (ZD6474) in recombinant enzyme assays revealed excellent selectivity for the inhibition of
KDR
tyrosine kinase (IC(50) 0.04 microM) vs the kinase activity of erbB2, MEK, CDK-2, Tie-2, IGFR-1R, PDK, PDGFRbeta, and AKT (IC(50) range: 1.1 to >100 microM). Anilinoquinazolines possessing basic C-7 side chains exhibited markedly improved aqueous solubility over previously described anilinoquinazolines possessing neutral C-7 side chains (up to 500-fold improvement at pH 7.4). In addition, aqueous solubility of the neutral fraction present at pH 7.4 of the basic subseries of anilinoquinazoline proved to be higher than that of the neutral analogue 1 (ZD4190). Oral administration of representative compounds to mice (50 mg/kg) produced plasma levels between 0.2 and 3 microM at 24 h after dosing. Our development candidate 2 demonstrated a very attractive in vitro profile combined with excellent solubility (330 microM at pH 7.4) and good oral bioavailability in rat and dog (> 80 and > 50%, respectively). This compound demonstrated highly significant, dose-dependent, antitumor activity in athymic mice. Once daily oral administration of 100 mg/kg of compound 2 for 21 days inhibited the growth of established Calu-6 lung carcinoma xenografts by 79% (P < 0.001, Mann Whitney rank sum test), and substantial inhibition (36%, P < 0.02) was evident with 12.5 mg/kg/day.
...
PMID:Novel 4-anilinoquinazolines with C-7 basic side chains: design and structure activity relationship of a series of potent, orally active, VEGF receptor tyrosine kinase inhibitors. 1188 99
Recently identified agents that interact with cytoskeletal elements such as tubulin include synthetic spiroketal pyrans (SPIKET) and monotetrahydrofuran compounds (COBRA compounds). SPIKET compounds target the spongistatin binding site of beta-tubulin and COBRA compounds target a unique binding cavity on alpha-tubulin. At nanomolar concentrations, the SPIKET compound SPIKET-P causes tubulin depolymerization and exhibits potent cytotoxic activity against cancer cells. COBRA-1 inhibits GTP-induced tubulin polymerization. Treatment of human breast cancer and brain tumor cells with COBRA-1 caused destruction of microtubule organization and apoptosis. Other studies have identified some promising protein tyrosine kinase inhibitors as anti-cancer agents. These include
EGFR
inhibitors such as the
quinazoline
derivative WHI-P97 and the leflunomide metabolite analog LFM-A12. Both LFM-A12 and WHI-P97 inhibit the in vitro invasiveness of
EGFR
positive human breast cancer cells at micromolar concentrations and induce apoptotic cell death. Dimethoxyquinazoline compounds WHI-P131 and WHI-P154 inhibit tyrosine kinase JAK3 in leukemia cells. Of particular interest is WHI-P131, which inhibits JAK3 but not JAK1, JAK2, SYK, BTK, LYN, or IRK at concentrations as high as 350 microM. Studies of BTK inhibitors showed that the leflunomide metabolite analog LFM-A13 inhibited BTK in leukemia and lymphoma cells. Consistent with the anti-apoptotic function of BTK, treatment of leukemic cells with LFM-A13 enhanced their sensitivity to chemotherapy-induced apoptosis.
...
PMID:Structure-based design of novel anticancer agents. 1218 92
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