TY - JOUR
T1 - Exploring Thiazolopyridine AV25R
T2 - Unraveling of Biological Activities, Selective Anti-Cancer Properties and In Silico Target and Binding Prediction in Hematological Neoplasms
AU - Ladwig, Annika
AU - Gupta, Shailendra
AU - Ehlers, Peter
AU - Sekora, Anett
AU - Alammar, Moosheer
AU - Koczan, Dirk
AU - Wolkenhauer, Olaf
AU - Junghanss, Christian
AU - Langer, Peter
AU - Murua Escobar, Hugo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 by the authors.
PY - 2023/12
Y1 - 2023/12
N2 - Thiazolopyridines are a highly relevant class of small molecules, which have previously shown a wide range of biological activities. Besides their anti-tubercular, anti-microbial and anti-viral activities, they also show anti-cancerogenic properties, and play a role as inhibitors of cancer-related proteins. Herein, the biological effects of the thiazolopyridine AV25R, a novel small molecule with unknown biological effects, were characterized. Screening of a set of lymphoma (SUP-T1, SU-DHL-4) and B- acute leukemia cell lines (RS4;11, SEM) revealed highly selective effects of AV25R. The selective anti-proliferative and metabolism-modulating effects were observed in vitro for the B-ALL cell line RS4;11. Further, we were able to detect severe morphological changes and the induction of apoptosis. Gene expression analysis identified a large number of differentially expressed genes after AV25R exposure and significant differentially regulated cancer-related signaling pathways, such as VEGFA-VEGFR2 signaling and the EGF/EGFR pathway. Structure-based pharmacophore screening approaches using in silico modeling identified potential biological AV25R targets. Our results indicate that AV25R binds with several proteins known to regulate cell proliferation and tumor progression, such as FECH, MAP11, EGFR, TGFBR1 and MDM2. The molecular docking analyses indicates that AV25R has a higher binding affinity compared to many of the experimentally validated small molecule inhibitors of these targets. Thus, here we present in vitro and in silico analyses which characterize, for the first time, the molecular acting mechanism of AV25R, including cellular and molecular biologic effects. Additionally, this predicted the target binding of the molecule, revealing a high affinity to cancer-related proteins and, thus, classified AVR25 for targeted intervention approaches.
AB - Thiazolopyridines are a highly relevant class of small molecules, which have previously shown a wide range of biological activities. Besides their anti-tubercular, anti-microbial and anti-viral activities, they also show anti-cancerogenic properties, and play a role as inhibitors of cancer-related proteins. Herein, the biological effects of the thiazolopyridine AV25R, a novel small molecule with unknown biological effects, were characterized. Screening of a set of lymphoma (SUP-T1, SU-DHL-4) and B- acute leukemia cell lines (RS4;11, SEM) revealed highly selective effects of AV25R. The selective anti-proliferative and metabolism-modulating effects were observed in vitro for the B-ALL cell line RS4;11. Further, we were able to detect severe morphological changes and the induction of apoptosis. Gene expression analysis identified a large number of differentially expressed genes after AV25R exposure and significant differentially regulated cancer-related signaling pathways, such as VEGFA-VEGFR2 signaling and the EGF/EGFR pathway. Structure-based pharmacophore screening approaches using in silico modeling identified potential biological AV25R targets. Our results indicate that AV25R binds with several proteins known to regulate cell proliferation and tumor progression, such as FECH, MAP11, EGFR, TGFBR1 and MDM2. The molecular docking analyses indicates that AV25R has a higher binding affinity compared to many of the experimentally validated small molecule inhibitors of these targets. Thus, here we present in vitro and in silico analyses which characterize, for the first time, the molecular acting mechanism of AV25R, including cellular and molecular biologic effects. Additionally, this predicted the target binding of the molecule, revealing a high affinity to cancer-related proteins and, thus, classified AVR25 for targeted intervention approaches.
KW - B-ALL
KW - anti-proliferative
KW - apoptosis
KW - lymphoma
KW - molecular docking
KW - target-screening
KW - thiazolopyridine
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85180693448
U2 - 10.3390/molecules28248120
DO - 10.3390/molecules28248120
M3 - Article
C2 - 38138609
AN - SCOPUS:85180693448
SN - 1420-3049
VL - 28
JO - Molecules
JF - Molecules
IS - 24
M1 - 8120
ER -