IBR   13079
INSTITUTO DE BIOLOGIA MOLECULAR Y CELULAR DE ROSARIO
Unidad Ejecutora - UE
artículos
Título:
Discovery of a Biologically Active Bromodomain Inhibitor by Target-Directed Dynamic Combinatorial Chemistry
Autor/es:
ALONSO, VICTORIA L.; FURLAN, RICARDO L. E.; SERRA, ESTEBAN; GARCÍA, PAULA; ESCALANTE, ANDREA M.; ALONSO, VICTORIA L.; FURLAN, RICARDO L. E.; SERRA, ESTEBAN; GARCÍA, PAULA; ESCALANTE, ANDREA M.
Revista:
ACS Medicinal Chemistry Letters
Editorial:
American Chemical Society
Referencias:
Lugar: Washington DC; Año: 2018 vol. 9 p. 1002 - 1006
ISSN:
1948-5875
Resumen:
Target-directed dynamic combinatorial chemistry (DCC) has emerged as a strategy for the identification of inhibitors of relevant therapeutic targets. In this contribution, we use this strategy for the identification of a high-affinity binder of a parasite target, the Trypanosoma cruzi bromodomain-containing protein TcBDF3. This protein is essential for viability of T. cruzi, the protozoan parasite that causes Chagas disease. A small dynamic library of acylhydrazones was prepared from aldehydes and acylhydrazides at neutral pH in the presence of aniline. The most amplified library member shows (a) high affinity for the template, (b) interesting antiparasitic activity against different parasite forms, and (c) low toxicity against Vero cells. In addition, parasites are rescued from the compound toxicity by TcBDF3 overexpression, suggesting that the toxicity of this compound is due to the TcBDF3 inhibition, i.e., the binding event that initially drives the molecular amplification is reproduced in the parasite, leading to selective toxicity.