1. Academic Validation
  2. Synthesis and biological evaluation of thio-benzodiazepines as novel small molecule inhibitors of the p53-MDM2 protein-protein interaction

Synthesis and biological evaluation of thio-benzodiazepines as novel small molecule inhibitors of the p53-MDM2 protein-protein interaction

  • Eur J Med Chem. 2011 Nov;46(11):5654-61. doi: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2011.09.043.
Chunlin Zhuang 1 Zhenyuan Miao Lingjian Zhu Yongqiang Zhang Zizhao Guo Jianzhong Yao Guoqiang Dong Shengzheng Wang Yang Liu Hai Chen Chunquan Sheng Wannian Zhang
Affiliations

Affiliation

  • 1 School of Pharmacy, Second Military Medical University, 325 Guohe Road, Shanghai 200433, People's Republic of China.
Abstract

A series of thio-benzodiazepine p53-MDM2 inhibitors were designed and synthesized based on the principle of bioisosterism. Most of the thio-benzodiazepines had nanomolar to micromolar affinity toward MDM2. Particularly, compounds 8a (K(i) = 0.52μM) and 8f (K(i) = 0.32 μM) showed binding activity comparable to the positive drug nutlin-3a (K(i) = 0.23 μM). Meanwhile, compound 8j exhibited excellent antitumor activity against the U-2 OS human osteosarcoma cell line with an IC(50) value of 1.06 μM, which was about 23 times higher than that of nutlin-3a. The docking model also successfully predicted that this class of compounds mimicked three p53 critical residues binding to MDM2. The thio-benzodiazepines represent a promising class of non-peptide inhibitors of the p53-MDM2 interaction.

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