1. Academic Validation
  2. Farnesyl Pyrophosphate Synthase as a Target for Drug Development: Discovery of Natural-Product-Derived Inhibitors and Their Activity in Pancreatic Cancer Cells

Farnesyl Pyrophosphate Synthase as a Target for Drug Development: Discovery of Natural-Product-Derived Inhibitors and Their Activity in Pancreatic Cancer Cells

  • J Med Chem. 2019 Dec 12;62(23):10867-10896. doi: 10.1021/acs.jmedchem.9b01405.
Shuai Han 1 Xin Li 1 2 Yun Xia 1 2 Zhengsen Yu 1 Ningning Cai 1 3 Satish R Malwal 4 Xu Han 5 Eric Oldfield 4 Yonghui Zhang 1 2 3
Affiliations

Affiliations

  • 1 School of Pharmaceutical Sciences, MOE Key Laboratory of Bioorganic Phosphorus Chemistry and Chemical Biology , Tsinghua University , 100084 Beijing , China.
  • 2 Joint Graduate Program of Peking-Tsinghua-NIBS, School of Life Sciences , Tsinghua University , 100084 Beijing , China.
  • 3 Collaborative Innovation Center for Biotherapy , Sichuan University , 610041 Chengdu , Sichuan , China.
  • 4 Department of Chemistry , University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign , Urbana , Illinois 61801 , United States.
  • 5 Industrial Enzymes National Engineering Laboratory , Tianjin Institute of Industrial Biotechnology, Chinese Academy of Sciences , 300308 Tianjin , China.
Abstract

Human farnesyl pyrophosphate synthase (Homo sapiens FPPS, HsFPPS) is a target for treating bone resorption diseases and some cancers. HsFPPS is potently inhibited by bisphosphonates, but due to poor cell penetration and distribution in soft tissue, there is currently interest in the development of non-bisphosphonate inhibitors as Cancer therapeutics. Here, we report the discovery and development of HsFPPS inhibitors based on the phenolic diterpene carnosic acid (CA), an antimicrobial found in rosemary and sage, which showed better cellular Anticancer activities than the bisphosphonate drug zoledronate in pancreatic Cancer cell lines, as well as an HsFPPS-dependent mechanism of action. Hit-to-lead optimization of CA improved HsFPPS inhibition by >100-fold. A slow dissociation inhibition pattern and a noncompetitive allosteric binding mode were found, and cellular mechanism-of-action studies showed that these inhibitors inhibit tumor cell growth primarily by inhibiting HsFPPS, leading to downregulation of Ras prenylation and cell Apoptosis. The discovery of this series of compounds together with proof-of-mechanism in pancreatic Cancer cells may pave the way for targeting HsFPPS in soft tissue cancers using natural-product-derived inhibitors.

Figures