Deregulation of cyclin-dependent kinase 2 (CDK2) and its activating partners, cyclins A and E, is associated with the pathogenesis of a myriad of human cancers and with resistance to anticancer drugs including CDK4/6 inhibitors. Thus, CDK2 has become an attractive target for the development of new anticancer therapies and for the amelioration of the resistance to CDK4/6 inhibitors. Bioisosteric replacement of the thiazole moiety of CDKI-73, a clinically trialled CDK inhibitor, by a pyrazole group afforded 9 and 19 that displayed potent CDK2-cyclin E inhibition (K = 0.023 and 0.001 μM, respectively) with submicromolar antiproliferative activity against a panel of cancer cell lines (GI = 0.025-0.780 μM). Mechanistic studies on 19 with HCT-116 colorectal cancer cells revealed that the compound reduced the phosphorylation of retinoblastoma at Ser807/811, arrested the cells at the G2/M phase, and induced apoptosis. These results highlight the potential of the 2-anilino-4-(1-methyl-1H-pyrazol-4-yl)pyrimidine series in developing potent and selective CDK2 inhibitors to combat cancer.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bmc.2023.117158DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

cdk2 inhibitors
8
cdk4/6 inhibitors
8
2-anilino-4-1-methyl-1h-pyrazol-4-ylpyrimidine-derived cdk2
4
inhibitors
4
inhibitors anticancer
4
anticancer agents
4
agents design
4
design synthesis
4
synthesis evaluation
4
evaluation deregulation
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!