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Vol. 297, Issue 3, 1099-1105, June 2001
Departments of Clinical Biochemistry (J.G.B., J.L.B., S.G.-R., A.F)
and Organic Chemistry-IMBIV, Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones
Científicas y Técnicas (R.R.G., T.L.M.), Faculty of
Chemical Sciences, National University of Córdoba, Córdoba,
Argentina
Compounds that inhibit aromatase activity are used for the treatment of
breast cancer. A group of sesquiterpene lactones inhibit aromatase
activity and also exert cytotoxicity through their reactive
-methylene-
-lactone group. To synthesize sesquiterpene lactones with greater specificity for aromatase inhibition and lower
cytotoxicity, we chemically reduced the
-methylene-
-lactone group
in the active aromatase inhibitor 10-epi-8-deoxycumambrin B (compound
1), to obtain the new compound
11
H,13-dihydro-10-epi-8-deoxycumambrin B (compound 2).
Reduction of the
-methylene-
-lactone group abrogated the
cytotoxic activity of compound 1 against the JEG-3, HeLa,
and COS-7 cell lines. Compound 2 had higher aromatase
inhibitory activity than compound 1 (IC50 = 2 ± 0.5 µM versus 7 ± 0.5 µM, Ki = 1.5 µM versus 4.0 µM) and was a more potent type II ligand to the heme iron present in
the cytochrome P450arom active site. Compound
2 inhibited aromatase activity in JEG-3 cells in a
comparable manner to the inhibitor aminoglutethimide (AG) used
clinically for the treatment of breast cancer. Additionally, compound
2 inhibited androstenedione-induced uterine hypertrophy in
sexually immature mice (41% of uterine weight suppression for compound
2 versus 51% for AG). We conclude that the anti-aromatase activity of sesquiterpene lactones does not depend on the presence of
the highly reactive
-methylene-
-lactone group, whereas their cytotoxicity does. These findings may facilitate the development of
safer agents for breast cancer therapy.