Selective TASK-1 inhibitor with a defined structure–activity relationship reduces cancer cell proliferation and viability

Autor
Arévalo, Bárbara
Bedoya, Mauricio
Kiper, Aytug K.
Vergara, Fernando
Ramírez, David
Mazola, Yuliet
Bustos, Daniel
Zúñiga, Rafael
Cikutovic, Rocio
Cayo, Angel
Rinné, Susanne
Ramirez-Apan, M. Teresa
Sepúlveda, Francisco V.
Cerda, Oscar
López-Collazo, Eduardo
Decher, Niels
Zúñiga, Leandro
Gutiérrez, Margarita
González, Wendy
Fecha
2021Resumen
Chemical structures of selective blockers of TASK channels contain aromatic groups and amide bonds. Using this rationale, we designed and synthesized a series of compounds based on 3-benzamidobenzoic acid. These compounds block TASK-1 channels by binding to the central cavity. The most active compound is 3-benzoylamino-N-(2-ethyl-phenyl)-benzamide or F3, blocking TASK-1 with an IC50 of 148 nM, showing a reduced inhibition of TASK-3 channels and not a significant effect on different K+ channels. We identified putative F3-binding sites in the TASK-1 channel by molecular modeling studies. Mutation of seven residues to A (I118A, L122A, F125A, Q126A, L232A, I235A, and L239A) markedly decreased the F3-induced inhibition of TASK-1 channels, consistent with the molecular modeling predictions. F3 blocks cell proliferation and viability in the MCF-7 cancer cell line but not in TASK-1 knockdown MCF-7 cells, indicating that it is acting in TASK-1 channels. These results indicated that TASK-1 is necessary to drive proliferation in the MCF-7 cancer cell line.
Fuente
Journal of Medicinal Chemistry, 65(22), 15014-15027Link de Acceso
Click aquí para ver el documentoIdentificador DOI
doi.org/10.1021/acs.jmedchem.1c00378Colecciones
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