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  2. Structure-activity relationship study of anticancer thymidine-quinoxaline conjugates under the low radiance of long wavelength ultraviolet light for photodynamic therapy

Structure-activity relationship study of anticancer thymidine-quinoxaline conjugates under the low radiance of long wavelength ultraviolet light for photodynamic therapy

  • Eur J Med Chem. 2016 Jan 1:107:180-91. doi: 10.1016/j.ejmech.2015.11.006.
Dejun Zhang 1 Huaming Liu 1 Qiong Wei 1 Qibing Zhou 2
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 Department of Nanomedicine and Biopharmaceuticals, College of Life Science and Technology, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, Hubei, China.
  • 2 Department of Nanomedicine and Biopharmaceuticals, College of Life Science and Technology, Huazhong University of Science and Technology, Wuhan, Hubei, China. Electronic address: qibingzhou@hust.edu.cn.
Abstract

Thymidine quinoxaline conjugate (dT-QX) is a thymidine analog with selective cytotoxicity against different Cancer cells. In this study, the structure activity relationship study of dT-QX analogs was carried out under the low radiance of black fluorescent (UVA-1) light. Significantly enhanced cytotoxicity was observed under UVA-1 activation among analogs containing both thymidine and quinoxaline moieties with different length of the linker, stereochemical configuration and halogenated substituents. Among these analogs, the thymidine dichloroquinoxaline conjugate exhibited potent activity under UVA-1 activation as the best candidate with EC50 at 0.67 μM and 1.3 μM against liver and pancreatic Cancer cells, respectively. In contrast, the replacement of thymidine moiety with a galactosyl residue or the replacement of quinoxaline moiety with a fluorescent pyrenyl residue or a simplified diketone structure resulted in the full loss of activity. Furthermore, it was revealed that the low radiance of UVA-1 at 3 mW/cm(2) for 20 min was sufficient enough to induce the full cytotoxicity of thymidine dichloroquinoxaline conjugate and that the cytotoxic mechanism was achieved through a rapid and steady production of Reactive Oxygen Species.

Keywords

Anticancer agents; Quinoxaline conjugates; Reactive oxygen species; Thymidine analogs; UVA-1 activation.

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