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Article Abstract

Geranylgeranyl diphosphate synthase (GGDPS) produces the 20-carbon isoprenoid species used in protein geranylgeranylation reactions. Inhibition of GGDPS has emerged as a novel means of disrupting the activity of geranylgeranylated proteins in cancers such as myeloma and osteosarcoma. We have focused on developing a series of isoprenoid triazole bisphosphonate-based GGDPS inhibitors, demonstrating a complex structure-activity relationship (SAR), not only at the enzymatic level, but also at the cellular and whole organism levels. To further investigate this SAR, we have prepared a family of novel derivatives that have a fixed phosphorus position by virtue of vinyl, epoxy or cyclopropyl groups that incorporate the α-carbon position. Additional modifications include compounds with homocitronellyl chains instead of homogeranyl or homoneryl chains. All new compounds were evaluated in GGDPS enzyme assays and in cellular assays involving a panel of human myeloma and osteosarcoma cell lines. The homocitronellyl derivatives displayed markedly reduced activity in both enzymatic and cellular assays. While all of the homogeranyl/homoneryl vinyl/epoxy/cyclopropyl compounds had relatively similar activity in the enzyme assay (IC's 0.37-2.87 μM), the cellular potencies varied more dramatically (ranging from 10 nM to no activity at 100 μM), depending on the olefin stereochemistry, the specific α-carbon modification and the tumor cell type. These findings, coupled with POM-prodrug and membrane permeability studies, support the hypothesis that there are specific membrane transporters mediating cellular uptake of these GGDPS inhibitors. Future studies focused on the identification of the membrane transporters responsible for the cellular uptake will enable further understanding of this complex SAR.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12090098PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bmc.2025.118140DOI Listing

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