Squires Matthew S, Feltell Ruth E, Wallis Nicola G, Lewis E Jonathan, Smith Donna-Michelle, Cross David M, Lyons John F, Thompson Neil T
Astex Therapeutics Ltd., 436 Cambridge Science Park, Milton Road, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Mol Cancer Ther. 2009 Feb;8(2):324-32. doi: 10.1158/1535-7163.MCT-08-0890. Epub 2009 Jan 27.
Cyclin-dependent kinases (CDK), and their regulatory cyclin partners, play a central role in eukaryotic cell growth, division, and death. This key role in cell cycle progression, as well as their deregulation in several human cancers, makes them attractive therapeutic targets in oncology. A series of CDK inhibitors was developed using Astex's fragment-based medicinal chemistry approach, linked to high-throughput X-ray crystallography. A compound from this series, designated AT7519, is currently in early-phase clinical development. We describe here the biological characterization of AT7519, a potent inhibitor of several CDK family members. AT7519 showed potent antiproliferative activity (40-940 nmol/L) in a panel of human tumor cell lines, and the mechanism of action was shown here to be consistent with the inhibition of CDK1 and CDK2 in solid tumor cell lines. AT7519 caused cell cycle arrest followed by apoptosis in human tumor cells and inhibited tumor growth in human tumor xenograft models. Tumor regression was observed following twice daily dosing of AT7519 in the HCT116 and HT29 colon cancer xenograft models. We show that these biological effects are linked to inhibition of CDKs in vivo and that AT7519 induces tumor cell apoptosis in these xenograft models. AT7519 has an attractive biological profile for development as a clinical candidate, and the tolerability and efficacy in animal models compare favorably with other CDK inhibitors in clinical development. Studies described here formed the biological rationale for investigating the potential therapeutic benefit of AT7519 in cancer patients.
细胞周期蛋白依赖性激酶(CDK)及其调节性细胞周期蛋白伴侣在真核细胞的生长、分裂和死亡中起着核心作用。它们在细胞周期进程中的这一关键作用,以及在几种人类癌症中的失调,使其成为肿瘤学中具有吸引力的治疗靶点。利用阿斯泰克斯基于片段的药物化学方法,并结合高通量X射线晶体学,开发了一系列CDK抑制剂。该系列中的一种化合物,命名为AT7519,目前正处于临床早期开发阶段。我们在此描述AT7519的生物学特性,它是几种CDK家族成员的强效抑制剂。AT7519在一组人类肿瘤细胞系中表现出强效的抗增殖活性(40 - 940 nmol/L),并且在此显示其作用机制与实体瘤细胞系中CDK1和CDK2的抑制作用一致。AT7519导致人类肿瘤细胞的细胞周期停滞,随后发生凋亡,并在人类肿瘤异种移植模型中抑制肿瘤生长。在HCT116和HT29结肠癌异种移植模型中,每天两次给药AT7519后观察到肿瘤消退。我们表明,这些生物学效应与体内CDK的抑制有关,并且AT7519在这些异种移植模型中诱导肿瘤细胞凋亡。AT7519具有作为临床候选药物开发的诱人生物学特性,并且在动物模型中的耐受性和疗效与其他处于临床开发阶段的CDK抑制剂相比具有优势。此处描述的研究为研究AT7519在癌症患者中的潜在治疗益处提供了生物学依据。