The K-sparing diuretic amiloride shows off-target anti-cancer effects in multiple rodent models. These effects arise from the inhibition of two distinct cancer targets: the trypsin-like serine protease urokinase-type plasminogen activator (uPA), a cell-surface mediator of matrix degradation and tumor cell invasiveness, and the sodium-hydrogen exchanger isoform-1 (NHE1), a central regulator of transmembrane H that supports carcinogenic progression. In this study, we co-screened our library of 5- and 6-substituted amilorides against these two targets, aiming to identify single-target selective and dual-targeting inhibitors for use as complementary pharmacological probes. Closely related analogs substituted at the 6-position with pyrimidines were identified as dual-targeting (pyrimidine uPA IC = 175 nM, NHE1 IC = 266 nM, uPA selectivity ratio = 1.5) and uPA-selective (methoxypyrimidine uPA IC = 86 nM, NHE1 IC = 12,290 nM, uPA selectivity ratio = 143) inhibitors, while high NHE1 potency and selectivity was seen with 5-morpholino ( NHE1 IC = 129 nM, uPA IC = 10,949 nM; NHE1 selectivity ratio = 85) and 5-(1,4-oxazepine) ( NHE1 IC = 85 nM, uPA IC = 5715 nM; NHE1 selectivity ratio = 67) analogs. Together, these amilorides comprise a new toolkit of chemotype-matched, non-cytotoxic probes for dissecting the pharmacological effects of selective uPA and NHE1 inhibition versus dual-uPA/NHE1 inhibition.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8000185 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms22062999 | DOI Listing |
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