Publications
2017
Chk1 inhibitor SCH900776 effectively potentiates the cytotoxic effects of platinum-based chemotherapeutic drugs in human colon cancer cells. Herůdková, J.; Paruch, K.; Khirsariya, P.; Souček, K.; Krkoška, M.; Vondálová Blanářová, O.; Sova, P.; Kozubík, A.; Hyršlová Vaculová, A.*
Neoplasia 2017, 19, 830.
Although Chk1 kinase inhibitors are currently under clinical investigation as effective cancer cell sensitizers to the cytotoxic effects of numerous chemotherapeutics, there is still a considerable uncertainty regarding their role in modulation of anticancer potential of platinum-based drugs. Here we newly demonstrate the ability of one of the most specific Chk1 inhibitors, SCH900776 (MK-8776), to enhance human colon cancer cell sensitivity to the cytotoxic effects of platinum(II) cisplatin and platinum(IV)- LA-12 complexes. The combined treatment with SCH900776 and cisplatin or LA-12 results in apparent increase in G1/S phase–related apoptosis, stimulation of mitotic slippage, and senescence of HCT116 cells. We further show that the cancer cell response to the drug combinations is significantly affected by the p21, p53, and PTEN status. In contrast to their wt counterparts, the p53- or p21-deficient cells treated with SCH900776 and cisplatin or LA-12 enter mitosis and become polyploid, and the senescence phenotype is strongly suppressed. While the cell death induced by SCH900776 and cisplatin or LA-12 is significantly delayed in the absence of p53, the anticancer action of the drug combinations is significantly accelerated in p21-deficient cells, which is associated with stimulation of apoptosis beyond G2/M cell cycle phase. We also show that cooperative killing action of the drug combinations in HCT116 cells is facilitated in the absence of PTEN. Our results indicate that SCH900776 may act as an important modulator of cytotoxic response triggered by platinum-based drugs in colon cancer cells.
A concise synthesis of forskolin. Hylse, O.; Maier, L.; Kučera, R.; Perečko, T.; Svobodová, A.; Kubala, L.; Paruch, K.; Švenda, J.*
Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 2017, 56, 12586–12589.
We report a 24-step synthesis of (±)-forskolin, which delivered hundred-milligram quantities of this complex diterpene in one pass. Transformations key to our approach include: (a) a strategic allylic transposition, (b) stepwise assembly of a sterically encumbered isoxazole ring, and (c) citric acid-modified Upjohn dihydroxylation of a resilient tetrasubstituted olefin. We demonstrate that the developed route has an exciting potential for the preparation of new forskolin analogs inaccessible by semisynthesis.
Enantioselective synthesis of cephalimysins B and C. Chalupa, D.; Vojáčková, P.; Partl, J.; Pavlovič, D.; Nečas, M.; Švenda, J.*
Org. Lett. 2017, 19, 750−753.
We report the first synthesis of spirocyclic natural products cephalimysin B and C. The route features a Ni(II)-diamine-catalyzed enantioselective conjugate addition of a densely substituted 3(2H)-furanone and an efficient dihydroxylation-lactonization sequence as key steps in the assembly of the spirocyclic core. The fully synthetic strategy is amenable to analog preparation.
BRCA1 or CDK12 loss sensitizes cells to CHK1 inhibitors. Paculová, H.; Kramara, J.; Šimečková, Š.; Souček, K.; Hylse, O.; Paruch, K.; Svoboda, M.; Mistrik, M.; Kohoutek, J.*
Tumor Biology 2017, 39 (10), 1.
A broad spectrum of tumors develop resistance to classic chemotherapy, necessitating the discovery of new therapies. One successful strategy exploits the synthetic lethality between poly(ADP-ribose) polymerase 1/2 proteins and DNA damage response genes, including BRCA1, a factor involved in homologous recombination–mediated DNA repair, and CDK12, a transcriptional kinase known to regulate the expression of DDR genes. CHK1 inhibitors have been shown to enhance the anti-cancer effect of DNA-damaging compounds. Since loss of BRCA1 increases replication stress and leads to DNA damage, we tested a hypothesis that CDK12- or BRCA1-depleted cells rely extensively on S-phase-related CHK1 functions for survival. The silencing of BRCA1 or CDK12 sensitized tumor cells to CHK1 inhibitors in vitro and in vivo. BRCA1 downregulation combined with CHK1 inhibition induced excessive amounts of DNA damage, resulting in an inability to complete the S-phase. Therefore, we suggest CHK1 inhibition as a strategy for targeting BRCA1- or CDK12-deficient tumors.
Synthesis and profiling of a novel potent selective inhibitor of CHK1 kinase possessing unusual N-trifluoromethylpyrazole pharmacophore resistant to metabolic N-dealkylation. Samadder, P.; Suchánková, T.; Hylse, O.; Khirsariya, P.; Nikulenkov, F.; Drápela, S.; Straková, N.; Vaňhara, P.; Vašíčková, K.; Kolářová, H.; Binó, L.; Bittová, M.; Ovesná, P.; Kollár, P.; Fedr, R.; Ešner, M.; Jaroš, J.; Hampl, A.; Krejčí, L.*; Paruch, K.*; Souček, K.*
Mol. Cancer Ther. 2017, 16, 1831.
Checkpoint-mediated dependency of tumor cells can be deployed to selectively kill them without substantial toxicity to normal cells. Specifically, loss of CHK1, a serine threonine kinase involved in the surveillance of the G2–M checkpoint in the presence of replication stress inflicted by DNA-damaging drugs, has been reported to dramatically influence the viability of tumor cells. CHK1′s pivotal role in maintaining genomic stability offers attractive opportunity for increasing the selectivity, effectivity, and reduced toxicity of chemotherapy. Some recently identified CHK1 inhibitors entered clinical trials in combination with DNA antimetabolites. Herein, we report synthesis and profiling of MU380, a nontrivial analogue of clinically profiled compound SCH900776 possessing the highly unusual N-trifluoromethylpyrazole motif, which was envisioned not to undergo metabolic oxidative dealkylation and thereby provide greater robustness to the compound. MU380 is a selective and potent inhibitor of CHK1 which sensitizes a variety of tumor cell lines to hydroxyurea or gemcitabine up to 10 times. MU380 shows extended inhibitory effects in cells, and unlike SCH900776, does not undergo in vivo N-dealkylation to the significantly less selective metabolite. Compared with SCH900776, MU380 in combination with GEM causes higher accumulation of DNA damage in tumor cells and subsequent enhanced cell death, and is more efficacious in the A2780 xenograft mouse model. Overall, MU380 represents a novel state-of-the-art CHK1 inhibitor with high potency, selectivity, and improved metabolic robustness to oxidative N-dealkylation.
Diastereoselective flexible synthesis of carbocyclic C-nucleosides. Maier, L.; Khirsariya, P.; Hylse, O.; Adla, S. K.; Černová, L.; Poljak, M.; Krajčovičová, S.; Weis, E.; Drápela, S.; Souček, K.; Paruch, K.*
J. Org. Chem. 2017, 82, 3382.
Carbocyclic C-nucleosides are quite rare. Our route enables flexible preparation of three classes of these nucleoside analogs from common precursors–properly substituted cyclopentanones, which can be prepared racemic (in six steps) or optically pure (in ten steps) from inexpensive norbornadiene. The methodology allows flexible manipulation of individual positions around the cyclopentane ring, namely highly diastereoselective installation of carbo- and heterocyclic substituents at position 1′, orthogonal functionalization of position 5′, and efficient inversion of stereochemistry at position 2′. Newly prepared carbocyclic C-analog of tubercidine, profiled in MCF7 (breast cancer) and HFF1 (human foreskin fibroblasts) cell cultures, is less potent than tubercidine itself, but more selectively toxic toward the tumorigenic cells.
Structural basis of interaction of CDK2 with roscovitine and its analogs possessing bioisosteric central heterocycles. Nekardová, M.; Vymětalová, L.; Khirsariya, P.; Kováčová, S.; Hylsová, M.; Jorda, R.; Kryštof, V.; Fanfrlík, J.; Hobza, P.*; Paruch, K.*
ChemPhysChem 2017, 18, 785.
The structural basis for the interaction of roscovitine and analogues containing 13 different bioisosteric central heterocycles with the enzyme cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) is elucidated. Although all the central scaffolds are very similar to the purine core of roscovitine, the experimentally determined IC50 values of the inhibitors span three orders of magnitude. By using an extensive computational chemistry approach, the affinities of the inhibitors to CDK2 are determined as calculated binding scores of complexes of the inhibitors with the protein. The interactions of the inhibitors with CDK2 are computationally described by using a hybrid quantum mechanics/semi-empirical quantum mechanics method (QM/SQM), which combines the DFT-D method for the QM part and the PM6-D3H4X method for the SQM part. The solvent effect is described by the COSMO implicit solvation model at the SQM level for the whole system. The contributions of the scaffolds and the individual substituents, quantified and evaluated in relation to conformations of optimized protein–inhibitor complexes, are found not to be simply additive. The inhibitory activity of the selected candidates, including two newly prepared compounds, is tested against CDK2. The results of the calculations are in close agreement with the experimental data.
Explicit treatment of active-site waters enhances quantum mechanical/implicit solvent scoring: Inhibition of CDK2 by new pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidines. Hylsová, M.; Carbain, B.; Fanfrlík, J.; Musilová, L.; Haldar, S.; Köprülüoğlu, C.; Ajani, H.; Brahmkshatriya, P. S.; Jorda, R.; Kryštof, V.; Hobza, P.; Echalier, A.; Paruch, K.*; Lepšík, M.*
Eur. J. Med. Chem. 2017, 126, 1118.
We present comprehensive testing of solvent representation in quantum mechanics (QM)-based scoring of protein-ligand affinities. To this aim, we prepared 21 new inhibitors of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) with the pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine core, whose activities spanned three orders of magnitude. The crystal structure of a potent inhibitor bound to the active CDK2/cyclin A complex revealed that the biphenyl substituent at position 5 of the pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine scaffold was located in a previously unexplored pocket and that six water molecules resided in the active site. Using molecular dynamics, protein-ligand interactions and active-site water H-bond networks as well as thermodynamics were probed. Thereafter, all the inhibitors were scored by the QM approach utilizing the COSMO implicit solvent model. Such a standard treatment failed to produce a correlation with the experiment (R2 = 0.49). However, the addition of the active-site waters resulted in significant improvement (R2 = 0.68). The activities of the compounds could thus be interpreted by taking into account their specific noncovalent interactions with CDK2 and the active-site waters. In summary, using a combination of several experimental and theoretical approaches we demonstrate that the inclusion of explicit solvent effects enhance QM/COSMO scoring to produce a reliable structure–activity relationship with physical insights. More generally, this approach is envisioned to contribute to increased accuracy of the computational design of novel inhibitors.