Doxazolidine, a proposed active metabolite of doxorubicin that cross-links DNA.

J Med Chem

Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, University of Colorado at Boulder, Boulder, Colorado 80309-0215, USA.

Published: December 2005

A crystal structure establishes doxoform as a dimeric formaldehyde conjugate of the oxazolidine of doxorubicin. Doxoform is a prodrug of doxazolidine, a monomeric doxorubicin formaldehyde-oxazolidine. Both doxoform and doxazolidine inhibit the growth of cancer cells at 1-4 orders of magnitude lower concentration than doxorubicin. They also inhibit the growth of cancer cells better than doxsaliform, a prodrug for an acyclic doxorubicin-formaldehyde conjugate. Doxoform rapidly hydrolyzes to doxazolidine, which then hydrolyzes to doxorubicin with a half-life of 3 min in human serum at 37 degrees C. Both doxoform and doxazolidine are taken up by multidrug-resistant MCF-7/Adr cells 3- to 4-fold better than doxorubicin. A molecular model suggests that doxazolidine can cross-link DNA by direct reaction with a G-base in a tautomeric form with synchronous ring opening of the oxazolidine. These results point to doxoform being a prodrug for doxazolidine that is the reactive species that directly cross-links DNA.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jm050678vDOI Listing

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