Exploring bat-inspired cyclic tryptophan diketopiperazines as ABCB1 Inhibitors

Chemotherapy-induced drug resistance remains a major cause of cancer recurrence and patient mortality. ATP binding cassette subfamily B member 1 (ABCB1) transporter overexpression in tumors contributes to resistance, yet current ABCB1 inhibitors have been unsuccessful in clinical trials. To address...

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Main Authors: Koh, Javier Yu Peng, Itahana, Yoko, Krah, Alexander, Mostafa, Habib, Ong, Mingmin, Iwamura, Sahana, Vincent, Dona Mariya, Krishnan, Sabhashina Radha, Ye, Weiying, Yim, Pierre Wing Chi, Khopade, Tushar M., Chen, Kunihiko, Kong, Pui San, Wang, Lin-Fa, Bates, Roderick Wayland, Kimura, Yasuhisa, Viswanathan, Rajesh, Bond, Peter J., Itahana, Koji
Other Authors: School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181325
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1813252024-11-25T07:31:22Z Exploring bat-inspired cyclic tryptophan diketopiperazines as ABCB1 Inhibitors Koh, Javier Yu Peng Itahana, Yoko Krah, Alexander Mostafa, Habib Ong, Mingmin Iwamura, Sahana Vincent, Dona Mariya Krishnan, Sabhashina Radha Ye, Weiying Yim, Pierre Wing Chi Khopade, Tushar M. Chen, Kunihiko Kong, Pui San Wang, Lin-Fa Bates, Roderick Wayland Kimura, Yasuhisa Viswanathan, Rajesh Bond, Peter J. Itahana, Koji School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology Chemistry ABCB1 Inhibitors Drug resistant cancers Chemotherapy-induced drug resistance remains a major cause of cancer recurrence and patient mortality. ATP binding cassette subfamily B member 1 (ABCB1) transporter overexpression in tumors contributes to resistance, yet current ABCB1 inhibitors have been unsuccessful in clinical trials. To address this challenge, we propose a new strategy using tryptophan as a lead molecule for developing ABCB1 inhibitors. Our idea stems from our studies on bat cells, as bats have low cancer incidences and high ABCB1 expression. We hypothesized that potential ABCB1 substrates in bats could act as competitive inhibitors in humans. By molecular simulations of ABCB1-substrate interactions, we generated a benzylated Cyclo-tryptophan (C3N-Dbn-Trp2) that inhibits ABCB1 activity with efficacy comparable to or better than the classical inhibitor, verapamil. C3N-Dbn-Trp2 restored chemotherapy sensitivity in drug-resistant human cancer cells with no adverse effect on cell proliferation. Our unique approach presents a promising lead toward developing effective ABCB1 inhibitors to treat drug-resistant cancers. Published version This work was supported by Duke-NUS Signature Programme Block Grant, the Singapore Ministry of Health’s National Medical Research Council grants (NMRC/OFIRG/15nov049/2016, COVID19TUG21-0098 / MOH-000798, NMRC/OFIRG/MOH-000639), and Singapore Ministry of Education Academic Research Fund Tier 2 Grant (MOE-T2EP30120-0012) to K.I., by DSTSERB Award #CRG-2020-005008, NSF RUI award #1709655, and IISER Tirupati to R.V., by JSPS KAKENHI (# JP18K19176) to Y.K., by Singapore National Research Foundation (NRF2012NRF-CRP001-056) to L-F.W., and by the support of BII (A*STAR) core funds to P.J.B. and A.K. Computational resources were provided by the National Supercomputing Centre (NSCC) Singapore. 2024-11-25T07:31:22Z 2024-11-25T07:31:22Z 2024 Journal Article Koh, J. Y. P., Itahana, Y., Krah, A., Mostafa, H., Ong, M., Iwamura, S., Vincent, D. M., Krishnan, S. R., Ye, W., Yim, P. W. C., Khopade, T. M., Chen, K., Kong, P. S., Wang, L., Bates, R. W., Kimura, Y., Viswanathan, R., Bond, P. J. & Itahana, K. (2024). Exploring bat-inspired cyclic tryptophan diketopiperazines as ABCB1 Inhibitors. Communications Chemistry, 7(1), 158-. https://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s42004-024-01225-z 2399-3669 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181325 10.1038/s42004-024-01225-z 39003409 2-s2.0-85198332118 1 7 158 en Communications Chemistry © 2024 The Author(s). Open Access. This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, which permits use, sharing, adaptation, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, as long as you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons licence, and indicate if changes were made. The images or other third party material in this article are included in the article’s Creative Commons licence, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. If material is not included in the article’s Creative Commons licence and your intended use is not permitted by statutory regulation or exceeds the permitted use, you will need to obtain permission directly from the copyright holder. To view a copy of this licence, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Chemistry
ABCB1 Inhibitors
Drug resistant cancers
spellingShingle Chemistry
ABCB1 Inhibitors
Drug resistant cancers
Koh, Javier Yu Peng
Itahana, Yoko
Krah, Alexander
Mostafa, Habib
Ong, Mingmin
Iwamura, Sahana
Vincent, Dona Mariya
Krishnan, Sabhashina Radha
Ye, Weiying
Yim, Pierre Wing Chi
Khopade, Tushar M.
Chen, Kunihiko
Kong, Pui San
Wang, Lin-Fa
Bates, Roderick Wayland
Kimura, Yasuhisa
Viswanathan, Rajesh
Bond, Peter J.
Itahana, Koji
Exploring bat-inspired cyclic tryptophan diketopiperazines as ABCB1 Inhibitors
description Chemotherapy-induced drug resistance remains a major cause of cancer recurrence and patient mortality. ATP binding cassette subfamily B member 1 (ABCB1) transporter overexpression in tumors contributes to resistance, yet current ABCB1 inhibitors have been unsuccessful in clinical trials. To address this challenge, we propose a new strategy using tryptophan as a lead molecule for developing ABCB1 inhibitors. Our idea stems from our studies on bat cells, as bats have low cancer incidences and high ABCB1 expression. We hypothesized that potential ABCB1 substrates in bats could act as competitive inhibitors in humans. By molecular simulations of ABCB1-substrate interactions, we generated a benzylated Cyclo-tryptophan (C3N-Dbn-Trp2) that inhibits ABCB1 activity with efficacy comparable to or better than the classical inhibitor, verapamil. C3N-Dbn-Trp2 restored chemotherapy sensitivity in drug-resistant human cancer cells with no adverse effect on cell proliferation. Our unique approach presents a promising lead toward developing effective ABCB1 inhibitors to treat drug-resistant cancers.
author2 School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology
author_facet School of Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Biotechnology
Koh, Javier Yu Peng
Itahana, Yoko
Krah, Alexander
Mostafa, Habib
Ong, Mingmin
Iwamura, Sahana
Vincent, Dona Mariya
Krishnan, Sabhashina Radha
Ye, Weiying
Yim, Pierre Wing Chi
Khopade, Tushar M.
Chen, Kunihiko
Kong, Pui San
Wang, Lin-Fa
Bates, Roderick Wayland
Kimura, Yasuhisa
Viswanathan, Rajesh
Bond, Peter J.
Itahana, Koji
format Article
author Koh, Javier Yu Peng
Itahana, Yoko
Krah, Alexander
Mostafa, Habib
Ong, Mingmin
Iwamura, Sahana
Vincent, Dona Mariya
Krishnan, Sabhashina Radha
Ye, Weiying
Yim, Pierre Wing Chi
Khopade, Tushar M.
Chen, Kunihiko
Kong, Pui San
Wang, Lin-Fa
Bates, Roderick Wayland
Kimura, Yasuhisa
Viswanathan, Rajesh
Bond, Peter J.
Itahana, Koji
author_sort Koh, Javier Yu Peng
title Exploring bat-inspired cyclic tryptophan diketopiperazines as ABCB1 Inhibitors
title_short Exploring bat-inspired cyclic tryptophan diketopiperazines as ABCB1 Inhibitors
title_full Exploring bat-inspired cyclic tryptophan diketopiperazines as ABCB1 Inhibitors
title_fullStr Exploring bat-inspired cyclic tryptophan diketopiperazines as ABCB1 Inhibitors
title_full_unstemmed Exploring bat-inspired cyclic tryptophan diketopiperazines as ABCB1 Inhibitors
title_sort exploring bat-inspired cyclic tryptophan diketopiperazines as abcb1 inhibitors
publishDate 2024
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/181325
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