1. Academic Validation
  2. Design and synthesis of a pro-drug of vinblastine targeted at treatment of prostate cancer with enhanced efficacy and reduced systemic toxicity

Design and synthesis of a pro-drug of vinblastine targeted at treatment of prostate cancer with enhanced efficacy and reduced systemic toxicity

  • J Med Chem. 2002 Oct 10;45(21):4706-15. doi: 10.1021/jm020139f.
Stephen F Brady 1 Joseph M Pawluczyk Patricia K Lumma Dong-Mei Feng Jenny M Wai Raymond Jones Deborah DeFeo-Jones Bradley K Wong Cynthia Miller-Stein Jiunn H Lin Allen Oliff Roger M Freidinger Victor M Garsky
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 Department of Medicinal Chemistry, Merck Research Laboratories, West Point, Pennsylvania 19486, USA. stebrady@voicenet.com
Abstract

Chemotherapy of prostate Cancer with antimitotic agents such as vinblastine and doxorubicin is only marginally effective, due to dose-limiting systemic toxicity. Herein we report the development of peptidyl conjugate 5 of the cytotoxic agent vinblastine (1), along with the results of its in vitro and in vivo evaluation as a pro-drug targeted at prostate Cancer cells. Prostate-derived tumors are known to produce significant amounts of prostate specific antigen (PSA), a serine protease with chymotrypsin-like properties. Earlier work in these laboratories established that an appropriately engineered peptidyl pro-drug will release active cytotoxic agent strictly within the microenvironment of the tumor tissue (Garsky, V. M., et al. J. Med.Chem. 2001, 44, 4216-4224). Conjugate 5, which features an octapeptide segment attached by an ester linkage at the 4-position of vinblastine (1), undergoes rapid cleavage by PSA (T(1/2) = 12 min) between the Gln and Ser residues. In nude mouse xenograft studies, 5 reduced circulating PSA levels by 99% and tumor weight by 85% at a dose just below its MTD. By contrast, the putative end-point metabolite, the cytotoxic agent des-acetyl vinblastine (1b), was ineffective in reducing PSA levels and tumor burden at its maximum tolerated doses. Additional data from metabolism studies on 5 support the supervention of a novel in vivo processing mechanism, the spontaneous release of 1b from a dipeptidyl intermediate driven by favorable diketopiperazine formation.

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