13425-93-9Relevant articles and documents
A New Synthesis of Cabozantinib
Fang, Ran,Wang, Bin,Zhao, Zhiwei,Yin, Lingfeng,Wang, Han,Xu, Jingli
, p. 381 - 387 (2019)
-
Design, Synthesis and Biological Evaluation of Novel α-Acyloxycarboxamide-Based Derivatives as c-Met Inhibitors
Feng, Yu-juan,Ren, Yu-Lin,Zhao, Li-Ming,Xue, Guo-Qiang,Yu, Wen-Hao,Yang, Jia-Qi,Liu, Jun-Wei
, p. 2241 - 2250 (2021/06/28)
Dysregulated HGF/c-Met signalling has been associated with many human cancers, poor clinical outcomes, and even resistance acquisition to some approved targeted therapies. As such, c-Met kinase has emerged as an attractive target for anticancer drug discovery. Herein, a series of 6,7-disubstitued-4-(2-fluorophenoxy)quinoline derivatives bearing α-acyloxycarboxamide moiety were designed, synthesized via Passerini reaction as the key step, and evaluated for their in vitro biological activities against c-Met kinase and five selected cancer cell lines. The preliminary structure-activity relationship demonstrated that α-acyloxycarboxamide as the 5-atom linker maintained the potent antitumor potency. Among these compounds, compound 25s (c-Met IC50 = 4.06 nmol/L) was identified as the most promising lead compound and displayed the most potent antiproliferative activities against A549, HT-29 and MDA-MB-231 cell lines with IC50 of 0.39, 0.20, and 0.58 μmol/L, which were 1.3-, 1.4- and 1.2-fold superior to foretinib, respectively. The further studies indicated that compound 25s can induce apoptosis of A549 cells and arrest efficiently the cell cycle distribution in G2/M phase of A549 cells. Moreover, compound 25s can also inhibit c-Met phosphorylation in A549 cells by a dose-dependent manner. Collectively, these results indicated that compound 25s could be a potential anticancer lead compound deserving for further development.
c-Met kinase inhibitor as well as preparation method and application thereof
-
Paragraph 0060-0071, (2021/07/17)
The invention belongs to the technical field of biological medicines, and particularly provides a c-Met kinase inhibitor represented by a general formula I. An in-vitro anti-tumor activity screening experiment shows that the compound disclosed by the invention shows relatively strong inhibitory activity on four cancer cells, namely human colon cancer cells (HT29), human non-small cell lung cancer cells (A549), human large cell lung cancer cells (H460) and human gastric cancer cells (MKN-45), and has a relatively good clinical application prospect.
Design, synthesis and biological evaluation of novel N-sulfonylamidine-based derivatives as c-Met inhibitors via Cu-catalyzed three-component reaction
Fang, Sen-Biao,Li, Hui-Jing,Nan, Xiang,Wu, Rui,Wu, Yan-Chao,Zhang, Jing,Zhang, Zhi-Zhou
, (2020/06/04)
In our continuing efforts to develop novel c-Met inhibitors as potential anticancer candidates, a series of new N-sulfonylamidine derivatives were designed, synthesized via Cu-catalyzed multicomponent reaction (MCR) as the key step, and evaluated for their in vitro biological activities against c-Met kinase and four cancer cell lines (A549, HT-29, MKN-45 and MDA-MB-231). Most of the target compounds showed moderate to significant potency at both the enzyme-based and cell-based assay and possessed selectivity for A549 and HT-29 cancer cell lines. The preliminary SAR studies demonstrated that compound 26af (c-Met IC50 = 2.89 nM) was the most promising compound compared with the positive foretinib, which exhibited the remarkable antiproliferative activities, with IC50 values ranging from 0.28 to 0.72 μM. Mechanistic studies of 26af showed the anticancer activity was closely related to the blocking phosphorylation of c-Met, leading to cell cycle arresting at G2/M phase and apoptosis of A549 cells by a concentration-dependent manner. The promising compound 26af was further identified as a relatively selective inhibitor of c-Met kinase, which also possessed an acceptable safety profile and favorable pharmacokinetic properties in BALB/c mouse. The favorable drug-likeness of 26af suggested that N-sulfonylamidines may be used as a promising scaffold for antitumor drug development. Additionally, the docking study and molecular dynamics simulations of 26af revealed a common mode of interaction with the binding site of c-Met. These positive results indicated that compound 26af is a potential anti-cancer candidate for clinical trials, and deserves further development as a selective c-Met inhibitor.