Studies on analogs of classical antifolates bearing the naphthoyl group in place of benzoyl in the side chain

Journal of Medicinal Chemistry
1993.0

Abstract

Analogues of classical antifolates with the 4-aminobenzoyl group replaced by 4-amino-1-naphthoyl were synthesized for study after molecular modeling indicated ample spatial accommodation for the naphthalene ring and even larger groups in models based on reported X-ray crystallographic data describing the binding of methotrexate to human dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR). The side-chain precursors, N-(4-amino- and 4-(methylamino)-1-naphthoyl)-L-glutamic acid diethyl esters, were synthesized, and the 2,4-diamino-substituted heterocyclic groups were attached using several methods. Target compounds included naphthoyl analogues of aminopterin (AMT), methotrexate (MTX), 5-deazaAMT, 5-deazaMTX, 5-methyl-5-deazaAMT, 5-methyl-5-deazaMTX, and 5,8-dideazaAMT. A 5,6,7,8-tetrahydronaphthoyl analogue of 5-deazaAMT was also prepared. None of the naphthoyl analogues showed loss in binding to DHFR compared with the corresponding antifolate bearing the benzoyl group, thus confirming the anticipated bulk tolerance. Only the 5,6,7,8-tetrahydronaphthoyl analogue displayed reduced antifolate effects. Substrate activity toward folylpolyglutamate synthetase was, however, severely compromised. The naphthoyl compounds were transported into L1210 cells 3-6 times more readily than MTX, and despite apparently low levels of intracellular polyglutamylation, each compound was found to be significantly more potent than MTX in inhibiting tumor cell growth in vitro in three lines (L1210, HL60, and S180). The MTX, 5-methyl-5-deazaAMT, and 5-methyl-5-deazaMTX analogues were evaluated in vivo alongside MTX against E0771 mammary adenocarcinoma in mice. All three proved more effective than MTX in retarding the tumor growth. The naphthoyl analogue of 5-deazaAMT strongly inhibited DHFR from Pneumocystis carinii, Toxoplasma gondii, and rat liver giving IC50 (pM) values of 0.53, 2.1, and 1.6 respectively, but this compound did not inhibit in vitro growth of T. gondii, thus indicating lack of transport.

Knowledge Graph

Similar Paper

Studies on analogs of classical antifolates bearing the naphthoyl group in place of benzoyl in the side chain
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 1993.0
Folate analogs. 34. Synthesis and antitumor activity of non-polyglutamylatable inhibitors of dihydrofolate reductase
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 1991.0
Methotrexate analogs. 19. Replacement of the glutamate side-chain in classical antifolates by L-homocysteic acid and L-cysteic acid: effect on enzyme inhibition and antitumor activity
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 1984.0
Methotrexate analogs. 31. Meta and ortho isomers of aminopterin, compounds with a double bond in the side chain, and a novel analog modified at the .alpha.-carbon: chemical and in vitro biological studies
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 1988.0
Syntheses and antifolate activity of 5-methyl-5-deaza analogs of aminopterin, methotrexate, folic acid, and N10-methylfolic acid
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 1986.0
Synthesis and biological activity of methotrexate analogs with two acid groups and a hydrophobic aromatic ring in the side chain
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 1991.0
Methotrexate analogs. 34. Replacement of the glutamate moiety in methotrexate and aminopterin by long-chain 2-aminoalkanedioic acids
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 1988.0
Methotrexate analogs. 26. Inhibition of dihydrofolate reductase and folylpolyglutamate synthetase activity and in vitro tumor cell growth by methotrexate and aminopterin analogs containing a basic amino acid side chain
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 1986.0
Syntheses and evaluation as antifolates of MTX analogs derived from 2,.omega.-diaminoalkanoic acids
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 1985.0
Novel 8-deaza-5,6,7,8-tetrahydroaminopterin derivatives as dihydrofolate inhibitor: Design, synthesis and antifolate activity
European Journal of Medicinal Chemistry 2009.0