ISSN: 2376-0419
+44 1300 500008
Manal Mohammed and M J N Chandrasekar
JSS College of Pharmacy, India
Scientific Tracks Abstracts: J Pharma Care Health Sys
Epigenetic regulation of gene expression is explicitly controlled via chromatin remodeling, which in turn is controlled through Post-Translational Modifications (PTM) of histone tails. The known PTMs include acetylation, methylation, phosphorylation, sumoylation and ubiquitylation. In neoplasms, the mechanism of histone acetylation gets imbalanced through the overexpression of Histone Deacetylase (HDAC) and/or inactivation of Histone Acetyl Transferase (HAT). Moreover, it extends to a plethora of effects including aberrant gene expression, oncogene activation, tumor suppressor gene inactivation and tumor progression. HDAC inhibitors regulate the gene expression and display anticancer potential. In the present study, a pharmacoinformatic approach was applied to develop a pharmacophore model based on a data set of 42 N-(2-aminophenyl) benzamide analogues reported for HDAC inhibitory profile. The generated model comprised of six chemical points, namely two hydrogen bond donors, two hydrogen bond acceptors and two aromatic rings. The statistically validated model (R2, SD, RCV2, etc.) was further employed as a basis to design a library of 138 leads, which was checked for matching fitness against the model. The final hits were selected for chemical synthesis depending on binding interaction(s) after molecular docking, binding free energies and in silico ADME properties. These synthesized hits, containing oxadiazole and thiadiazole heterocycles, were investigated for their in vitro HDAC8 inhibitory and antitumor activity. Among all the compounds, the hydroxamic acid analogue containing p-tolyl substituted thiadiazole displayed better HDAC8 inhibitory potential and significant anticancer activity in comparison to FDA approved HDAC inhibitor, SAHA. These results warrant further investigations to substantiate the compound as a promising drug for the treatment of cancer.
Manal Mohammed is currently pursuing her PhD in Pharmaceutical Chemistry at JSS University, India. Her PhD work focuses on the design and synthesis of novel compounds as histone deacetylase (HDAC) inhibitors for cancer therapy. Her research interests include molecular modeling and in silico design of novel molecules using computational tools.