AI Article Synopsis

  • Multi-target drug design aims to create drugs that can interact with multiple physiological targets at once, enhancing their effectiveness in treating diseases.
  • QT-011, a derivative of tamibarotene combined with furoxan, shows improved antileukemia effects by releasing nitric oxide and tamibarotene, outperforming tamibarotene alone in both cell cultures and mouse models.
  • Autodocking assays indicate that QT-011 fits well with retinoic acid receptors, suggesting it could be a promising candidate for leukemia treatment.

Article Abstract

Multi-target drug design, in which drugs are designed as single molecules to simultaneously modulate multiple physiological targets, is an important strategy in the field of drug discovery. QT-011, a tamibarotene-furoxan derivative, was here prepared and proposed to exert synergistic effects on antileukemia by releasing nitric oxide and tamibarotene. Compared with tamibarotene itself, QT-011 displayed stronger antiproliferative effects on U937 and HL-60 cells and was more effective evaluated in a nude mice U937 xenograft model in vivo. In addition, QT-011 could release nitric oxide which might contribute to the antiproliferative activity. Autodocking assays showed that QT-011 fits well with the hydrophobic pocket of retinoic acid receptors. Taken together, these results suggest that QT-011 might be a highly effective derivative of tamibarotene and a potential candidate compound as antileukemia agent.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.7314/apjcp.2014.15.15.6343DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • Multi-target drug design aims to create drugs that can interact with multiple physiological targets at once, enhancing their effectiveness in treating diseases.
  • QT-011, a derivative of tamibarotene combined with furoxan, shows improved antileukemia effects by releasing nitric oxide and tamibarotene, outperforming tamibarotene alone in both cell cultures and mouse models.
  • Autodocking assays indicate that QT-011 fits well with retinoic acid receptors, suggesting it could be a promising candidate for leukemia treatment.
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