Chromopynones are pseudo natural product glucose uptake inhibitors targeting glucose transporters GLUT-1 and -3

The principles guiding the design and synthesis of bioactive compounds based on natural product (NP) structure, such as biology-oriented synthesis (BIOS), are limited by their partial coverage of the NP-like chemical space of existing NPs and retainment of bioactivity in the corresponding compound c...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nature chemistry 2018-11, Vol.10 (11), p.1103-1111
Hauptverfasser: Karageorgis, George, Reckzeh, Elena S., Ceballos, Javier, Schwalfenberg, Melanie, Sievers, Sonja, Ostermann, Claude, Pahl, Axel, Ziegler, Slava, Waldmann, Herbert
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The principles guiding the design and synthesis of bioactive compounds based on natural product (NP) structure, such as biology-oriented synthesis (BIOS), are limited by their partial coverage of the NP-like chemical space of existing NPs and retainment of bioactivity in the corresponding compound collections. Here we propose and validate a concept to overcome these limitations by de novo combination of NP-derived fragments to structurally unprecedented ‘pseudo natural products’. Pseudo NPs inherit characteristic elements of NP structure yet enable the efficient exploration of areas of chemical space not covered by NP-derived chemotypes, and may possess novel bioactivities. We provide a proof of principle by designing, synthesizing and investigating the biological properties of chromopynone pseudo NPs that combine biosynthetically unrelated chromane- and tetrahydropyrimidinone NP fragments. We show that chromopynones define a glucose uptake inhibitor chemotype that selectively targets glucose transporters GLUT-1 and -3, inhibits cancer cell growth and promises to inspire new drug discovery programmes aimed at tumour metabolism. New natural-product-inspired molecules are often limited by their only partial coverage of biologically relevant chemical space. Combining fragments of natural products has now been shown to yield pseudo natural products, which — while still being inspired by natural products — populate previously unexplored areas of chemical space and have novel biological activities.
ISSN:1755-4330
1755-4349
DOI:10.1038/s41557-018-0132-6