1. Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of carboxy analogues of arginine methyltransferase inhibitor 1 (AMI-1)
- Author
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Rino Ragno, Sabrina Castellano, Gerald Brosch, Ciro Milite, Vittorio Limongelli, Astrid Spannhoff, Donghang Cheng, Mark T. Bedford, Gianluca Sbardella, Ingo Bauer, Silvia Simeoni, Antonello Mai, Ettore Novellino, Castellano, S., Milite, C., Ragno, R., Simeoni, S., Mai, A., Limongelli, Vittorio, Novellino, E., Bauer, I., Brosch, G., Spannhoff, A., Cheng, D., Bedford, M. T., and Sbardella, G.
- Subjects
Models, Molecular ,Cell-Differentiation ,Protein-Arginine N-Methyltransferases ,Methyltransferase ,Inhibitor ,Arginine ,Stereochemistry ,Protein Conformation ,Binding Mode Analysi ,Lysine ,Quantitative Structure-Activity Relationship ,Biology ,Biochemistry ,Aspergillus nidulans ,Histone/Protein Methyltransferase ,Fungal Proteins ,Naphthalenesulfonates ,Drug Discovery ,Histone methylation ,Moiety ,Humans ,Urea ,Small-Molecule Inhibitor ,General Pharmacology, Toxicology and Pharmaceutics ,Pharmacology ,Binding Sites ,Nuclear-Receptor Function ,Organic Chemistry ,Intracellular Signaling Peptides and Proteins ,Epigenetic ,Transcriptional Coactivator ,Biological activity ,Histone-Lysine N-Methyltransferase ,Methyltransferases ,Dimethylarginine Dimethylaminohydrolase ,Unique Substrate-Specificity ,Enzyme ,Histone methyltransferase ,Androgen Receptor ,Molecular Medicine ,Histone Methylation ,In-Vivo ,Transferase - Abstract
Here we report the synthesis of a number of compounds structurally related to arginine methyltransferase inhibitor 1 (AMI-1). The structural alterations that we made included: 1) the substitution of the sulfonic groups with the bioisosteric carboxylic groups; 2) the replacement of the ureidic function with a bis-amidic moiety; 3) the introduction of a N-containing basic moiety; and 4) the positional isomerization of the aminohydroxynaphthoic moiety. We have assessed the biological activity of these compounds against a panel of arginine methyltransferases (fungal RmtA, hPRMT1, hCARM1, hPRMT3, hPRMT6) and a lysine methyltransferase (SET7/9) using histone and nonhistone proteins as substrates. Molecular modeling studies for a deep binding-mode analysis of test compounds were also performed. The bis-carboxylic acid derivatives 1 b and 7 b emerged as the most effective PRMT inhibitors, both in vitro and in vivo, being comparable or even better than the reference compound (AMI-1) and practically inactive against the lysine methyltransferase SET7/9.
- Published
- 2010