Affiliation:
1. School of Biological Sciences, The University of Auckland
2. School of Chemical Sciences, The University of Auckland
3. Maurice Wilkins Centre for Molecular Biodiscovery, The University of Auckland
4. Auckland Cancer Society Research Centre, Faculty of Medical and Health Sciences, The University of Auckland
Abstract
AbstractPreliminary results of the effect of hydrophobicity and halogenation on the cytotoxicity of the anticancer peptaibol culicinin D are reported. Building on previous work, the synthetically challenging (2S,4S,6R)-2-amino-6-hydroxy-4-methyl-8-oxodecanoic acid and (2S,4R)-2-amino-4-methyldecanoic acid building blocks were replaced with derivatives of l-phenylalanine and 2-aminodecanoic acid, respectively. Substitution of (2S,4S,6R)-2-amino-6-hydroxy-4-methyl-8-oxodecanoic acid with l-4,4′-biphenylalanine yielded an analogue that was tenfold more potent than the natural product and was also the most hydrophobic analogue, as judged by an antiproliferative IC50 assay and logD calculations; these results suggest that the potency of culicinin D may be governed by its hydrophobicity. However, the introduction of halogenated moieties into the peptide sequence generated analogues that were similarly potent, although not necessarily hydrophobic. Thus, the parameters regulating the cytotoxicity of culicinin D, and by extension other peptaibols, are multimodal and include both halogenation and hydrophobicity.
Funder
Health Research Council of New Zealand
Maurice Wilkins Centre for Molecular Biodiscovery
Subject
Organic Chemistry,Catalysis
Cited by
1 articles.
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