98%
921
2 minutes
20
A stimuli-sensitive linker is one of the indispensable components of prodrugs for cancer therapy as it covalently binds the drug and releases it upon external stimulation at the tumour site. Quinone methide elimination has been widely used as the key transformation to release drugs based on their nucleofugacity. The usual approach is to bind the drug to the linker as a carbamate and release it as a free amine after a self-immolative 1,6-elimination. Although this approach is very efficient, it is limited to amines (as carbamates), alcohols or phenols (as carbonates) or other acidic functional groups. We report here a self-immolative spacer capable of directly linking and releasing amines, phenols, thiols, sulfonamides and carboxyamides after a reductive stimulus. The spacer is based on the structure of (5-nitro-2-pyrrolyl)methanol (NPYM-OH), which was used for the direct alkylation of the functional groups mentioned above. The spacer is metabolically stable and has three indispensable sites for bioconjugation: the bioresponsive trigger, the conjugated 1,6 self-immolative system and a third arm suitable for conjugation with a carrier or other modifiers. Release was achieved by selective reduction of the nitro group over Fe/Pd nanoparticles (NPs) in a micellar aqueous environment (HO/TPGS-750-M), or by NADH mediated nitroreductase activation. A DFT study demonstrates that, during the 1,6 elimination, the transition state formed from 5-aminopyrrole has a lower activation energy compared to other 5-membered heterocycles or -aminobenzyl derivatives. The NPYM scaffold was validated by late-stage functionalisation of approved drugs such as celecoxib, colchicine, vorinostat or ciprofloxacin. A hypoxia-activated NPYM-based prodrug (HAP) derived from HDAC inhibitor ST7612AA1 was also produced, which was active in cancer cells under hypoxic conditions.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11041255 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4sc01576b | DOI Listing |
Inorg Chem
September 2025
Key Laboratory of Chemistry and Engineering of Forest Products, State Ethnic Affairs Commission, Guangxi Key Laboratory of Chemistry and Engineering of Forest Products, Guangxi Collaborative Innovation Center for Chemistry and Engineering of Forest Products, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineer
In this work, we developed the first mitochondria-targeted ratiometric and colorimetric fluorescent probe for Hg detection, utilizing coumarin as the fluorophore, diphenylphosphinoselenoate as the recognition group, and -hydroxybenzyl moiety as the self-immolative spacer. Upon reaction with Hg, exhibited a significant blue shift in absorption spectra from 492 to 426 nm (Δ66 nm), resulting in color change from orange to pale yellow under natural light. Simultaneously, the fluorescence spectra of were blue-shifted from 570 to 498 nm (Δ72 nm), accompanied by a substantial increase in the emission ratio of F/F (/ up to 892-fold) and fluorescence color change from salmon pink to blue under 365 nm ultraviolet (UV) light.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnalyst
May 2025
Key Laboratory of Structure-Based Drug Design & Discovery, Ministry of Education, and School of Traditional Chinese Materia Medica, Shenyang Pharmaceutical University, 103 Wenhua Road, Shenyang 110016, P. R. China.
Cysteine, a pivotal biothiol vital for human health, exhibits strong associations with various diseases, yet its concentration assessment is often confounded by structurally and functionally similar biothiols. Hydrogen sulfide (HS), an endogenous gasotransmitter with therapeutic potential, faces challenges in achieving pharmacological effects due to the unpredictable presence of inorganic HS donors. To address these issues, we developed TMN-ONCS, a near-infrared fluorescent probe that integrates a -tolyl isothiocyanate with a dicyanoisophorone fluorophore through a self-immolative spacer.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChemistry
June 2025
School of Pharmacy, University of Otago, 18 Frederick Street, Dunedin, 9054, New Zealand.
Self-immolative linkers that use p-amino/hydroxy-benzyloxycarbonyl (PABC/PHBC) spacers are essential to the mechanism of many prodrugs. However, a highly reactive (aza)quinone methide is generated as a potential toxic byproduct. To remove the methide as it forms, we synthesized a series of novel tripartite prodrugs, comprising different triggers (nitro, amide, azide, boronate) and a PABC/PHBC-type self-immolative spacer with an integrated nucleophile (amine).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Pharm
March 2025
Seaport Therapeutics, 6 Tide Street, Boston, Massachusetts 02210, United States.
Enhanced transport of immunomodulators via the lymphatics may increase drug exposure to therapeutic targets in the immune system. Our laboratory has demonstrated a triglyceride (TG) mimetic prodrug approach to enhance the lymphatic delivery of a model immunomodulator, mycophenolic acid (MPA), via conjugation of the carboxylic acid of MPA to a TG backbone, where the so formed prodrug is able to incorporate into intestinal TG deacylation-reacylation and lymph lipoprotein transport pathways (up to 37% of the administered dose being absorbed via the lymphatics). In the current study, another conjugation site in the molecule of MPA, i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBioconjug Chem
February 2025
School of Chemistry, Raymond and Beverly Sackler Faculty of Exact Sciences, Tel-Aviv University, Tel Aviv 69978, Israel.
ENPP-1 is a transmembrane enzyme involved in nucleotide metabolism, and its overexpression is associated with various cancers, making it a potential therapeutic target and biomarker for early tumor diagnosis. Current detection methods for ENPP-1 utilize a colorimetric probe, , which has significant limitations in sensitivity. Here, we present probe , the first nucleic acid-based chemiluminescent probe designed for rapid and highly sensitive detection of ENPP-1 activity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF