FL118: A potential bladder cancer therapeutic compound targeting H2A.X identified through library screening

[Display omitted] •Built compound library with high potential anti-tumor camptothecin derivatives.•Screened highly active compounds represented by FL118 in bladder cancer cell lines.•FL118 inhibits GC-sensitive/insensitive bladder cancer cells, organoids, and PDXs well.•FL118 binds to H2A.X and DNA,...

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Veröffentlicht in:Bioorganic chemistry 2024-12, Vol.153, p.107802, Article 107802
Hauptverfasser: Fan, Guangrui, Luo, Xiongfei, Shi, Yibo, Wang, Yingru, Ji, Luhua, Gong, Yuwen, Yang, Engaung, Chen, Chaohu, Cui, Shu, Ding, Hui, Zhang, Zhijun, Wang, Juan, Liu, Yingqian, Wang, Zhiping
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •Built compound library with high potential anti-tumor camptothecin derivatives.•Screened highly active compounds represented by FL118 in bladder cancer cell lines.•FL118 inhibits GC-sensitive/insensitive bladder cancer cells, organoids, and PDXs well.•FL118 binds to H2A.X and DNA, inducing DNA breaks and disrupting repair processes.•The therapeutic dose of FL118 demonstrates controllable tissue toxicity. The treatment of bladder cancer is limited by low drug efficacy and drug resistance. Hence, this study aimed to screen and identify potential drug precursors and investigate their mechanism of action. A set of camptothecin derivatives showing high anti-tumor potential was selected from early-stage research or literature and synthesized to construct a compound library. A total of 135 compounds were screened in T24 and J82 cells, revealing that FL118 significantly inhibited the proliferation of GC (gemcitabine + cisplatin)-sensitive/insensitive cells. FL118 exhibited excellent penetration and killing ability in organoids and three GC-insensitive patient-derived xenografts. Chemical proteomic and docking calculations were employed to identify binding proteins, indicating that FL118 can bind into H2A.X and its entwined DNA. The results of Cellular thermal shift assay and surface plasmon resonance (Kd = 3.77E-6) support the above findings. Fluorescence localization revealed widespread binding of FL118 within the cell nucleus. Furthermore, WB showed that FL118 increased cellular DNA damage, resulting in significant cell cycle inhibition. The binding of FL118 to H2A.X hindered the damage repair process, leading to apoptosis. Controllable adverse reactions were observed in mice treated with FL118. In conclusion, FL118 may be a superior anti-bladder cancer compound that acts as a molecular glue binding to both H2A.X and DNA. The resistance mediated by the DNA damage repair to DNA damage caused by GC regimen can be reversed by FL118. This distinct mechanism of FL118 has the potential to complement existing mainstream treatment approaches for bladder cancer.
ISSN:0045-2068
1090-2120
1090-2120
DOI:10.1016/j.bioorg.2024.107802