Publication: A 5-FU Precursor Designed to Evade Anabolic and Catabolic Drug Pathways and Activated by Pd Chemistry In Vitro and In Vivo.
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Date
2022-01-03
Authors
Adam, Catherine
Bray, Thomas L
Pérez-López, Ana M
Tan, Ee Hong
Rubio-Ruiz, Belén
Baillache, Daniel J
Houston, Douglas R
Salji, Mark J
Leung, Hing Y
Unciti-Broceta, Asier
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Abstract
5-Fluorouracil (5-FU) is an antineoplastic antimetabolite that is widely administered to cancer patients by bolus injection, especially to those suffering from colorectal and pancreatic cancer. Because of its suboptimal route of administration and dose-limiting toxicities, diverse 5-FU prodrugs have been developed to confer oral bioavailability and increase the safety profile of 5-FU chemotherapy regimens. Our contribution to this goal is presented herein with the development of a novel palladium-activated prodrug designed to evade the metabolic machinery responsible for 5-FU anabolic activation and catabolic processing. The new prodrug is completely innocuous to cells and highly resistant to metabolization by primary hepatocytes and liver S9 fractions (the main metabolic route for 5-FU degradation), whereas it is rapidly converted into 5-FU in the presence of a palladium (Pd) source. In vivo pharmokinetic analysis shows the prodrug is rapidly and completely absorbed after oral administration and exhibits a longer half-life than 5-FU. In vivo efficacy studies in a xenograft colon cancer model served to prove, for the first time, that orally administered prodrugs can be locally converted to active drugs by intratumorally inserted Pd implants.
Description
MeSH Terms
Animals
Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic
Biotransformation
Fluorouracil
HCT116 Cells
Half-Life
Hepatocytes
Humans
Liver
Metabolic Networks and Pathways
Mice
Palladium
Prodrugs
Protein Binding
Rats
Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays
Antimetabolites, Antineoplastic
Biotransformation
Fluorouracil
HCT116 Cells
Half-Life
Hepatocytes
Humans
Liver
Metabolic Networks and Pathways
Mice
Palladium
Prodrugs
Protein Binding
Rats
Xenograft Model Antitumor Assays