AI Article Synopsis

  • Illudin S and M are toxic compounds from the fungus Omphalotus illudens, but their derivatives, specifically acylfulvene, show strong potential as antitumor agents.
  • In clinical trials, irofulven significantly improved survival rates for patients with hard-to-treat metastatic prostate cancer.
  • Researchers have created various derivatives of irofulven that maintain essential functional groups, demonstrating effective activity against cancer cells while being relatively safe for non-target cells.

Article Abstract

Illudin S and M (1, 2) are highly toxic sesquiterpenes found in the basidiomycete Omphalotus illudens. Illudins have a low therapeutic index, but acylfulvene derivatives display potent in vivo antitumor activity against a variety of multidrug resistant tumors. The lead acylfulvene (4), irofulven (5), in a randomized phase IIB clinical trial significantly increased overall survival in patients with metastatic hormone-refractory prostate cancer who failed prior treatment with two different standard chemotherapeutic regimens. Irofulven is unique, as the primary allylic hydroxyl group can undergo displacement with a variety of nucleophiles to produce analogues that retain key functional groups required for biological activity including the reactive cyclopropylmethyl carbinol and alpha,beta-unsaturated ketone. As described here, we synthesized a variety of urea, carbamate, and sulfonamide derivatives that retain key functional groups and display potent biological activity toward target solid tumor cells in vitro but are relatively nontoxic toward a nontarget B-cell derived cell line.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jm901384sDOI Listing

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