-
Structure (London, England : 1993) Mar 2021The hERG channel is a voltage-gated potassium channel involved in cardiac repolarization. Off-target hERG inhibition by drugs has become a critical issue in the...
The hERG channel is a voltage-gated potassium channel involved in cardiac repolarization. Off-target hERG inhibition by drugs has become a critical issue in the pharmaceutical industry. The three-dimensional structure of the hERG channel was recently reported at 3.8-Å resolution using cryogenic electron microscopy (cryo-EM). However, the drug inhibition mechanism remains unclear because of the scarce structural information regarding the drug- and potassium-bound hERG channels. In this study, we obtained the cryo-EM density map of potassium-bound hERG channel complexed with astemizole, a well-known hERG inhibitor that increases risk of potentially fatal arrhythmia, at 3.5-Å resolution. The structure suggested that astemizole inhibits potassium conduction by binding directly below the selectivity filter. Furthermore, we propose a possible binding model of astemizole to the hERG channel and provide insights into the unusual sensitivity of hERG to several drugs.
Topics: Astemizole; Binding Sites; Cryoelectron Microscopy; ERG1 Potassium Channel; HEK293 Cells; Humans; Molecular Docking Simulation; Potassium Channel Blockers; Protein Binding
PubMed: 33450182
DOI: 10.1016/j.str.2020.12.007 -
Journal For Immunotherapy of Cancer Jul 2023Most immunotherapies approved for clinical use rely on the use of recombinant proteins and cell-based approaches, rendering their manufacturing expensive and logistics...
BACKGROUND
Most immunotherapies approved for clinical use rely on the use of recombinant proteins and cell-based approaches, rendering their manufacturing expensive and logistics onerous. The identification of novel small molecule immunotherapeutic agents might overcome such limitations.
METHOD
For immunopharmacological screening campaigns, we built an artificial miniature immune system in which dendritic cells (DCs) derived from immature precursors present MHC (major histocompatibility complex) class I-restricted antigen to a T-cell hybridoma that then secretes interleukin-2 (IL-2).
RESULTS
The screening of three drug libraries relevant to known signaling pathways, FDA (Food and Drug Administration)-approved drugs and neuroendocrine factors yielded two major hits, astemizole and ikarugamycin. Mechanistically, ikarugamycin turned out to act on DCs to inhibit hexokinase 2, hence stimulating their antigen presenting potential. In contrast, astemizole acts as a histamine H1 receptor (H1R1) antagonist to activate T cells in a non-specific, DC-independent fashion. Astemizole induced the production of IL-2 and interferon-γ (IFN-γ) by CD4 and CD8 T cells both in vitro and in vivo. Both ikarugamycin and astemizole improved the anticancer activity of the immunogenic chemotherapeutic agent oxaliplatin in a T cell-dependent fashion. Of note, astemizole enhanced the CD8/Foxp3 ratio in the tumor immune infiltrate as well as IFN-γ production by local CD8 T lymphocytes. In patients with cancer, high H1R1 expression correlated with low infiltration by TH1 cells, as well as with signs of T-cell exhaustion. The combination of astemizole and oxaliplatin was able to cure the majority of mice bearing orthotopic non-small cell lung cancers (NSCLC), then inducing a state of protective long-term immune memory. The NSCLC-eradicating effect of astemizole plus oxaliplatin was lost on depletion of either CD4 or CD8 T cells, as well as on neutralization of IFN-γ.
CONCLUSIONS
These findings underscore the potential utility of this screening system for the identification of immunostimulatory drugs with anticancer effects.
Topics: United States; Mice; Animals; CD8-Positive T-Lymphocytes; Interleukin-2; Astemizole; Oxaliplatin; Immunity, Cellular; Histocompatibility Antigens Class I; Interferon-gamma
PubMed: 37419511
DOI: 10.1136/jitc-2023-006785 -
BMC Chemistry Feb 2021Imidazole is a five-membered heterocyclic moiety that possesses three carbon, two nitrogen, four hydrogen atoms, and two double bonds. It is also known as 1, 3-diazole.... (Review)
Review
Imidazole is a five-membered heterocyclic moiety that possesses three carbon, two nitrogen, four hydrogen atoms, and two double bonds. It is also known as 1, 3-diazole. It contains two nitrogen atoms, in which one nitrogen bear a hydrogen atom, and the other is called pyrrole type nitrogen. The imidazole name was reported by Arthur Rudolf Hantzsch (1857-1935) in 1887. 1, 3-diazole is an amphoteric in nature i.e. it shows both acidic and basic properties. It is a white or colorless solid that is highly soluble in water and other polar solvents. Due to the presence of a positive charge on either of two nitrogen atom, it shows two equivalent tautomeric forms. Imidazole was first named glyoxaline because the first synthesis has been made by glyoxal and ammonia. It is the basic core of some natural products such as histidine, purine, histamine and DNA based structures, etc. Among the different heterocyclic compounds, imidazole is better known due to its broad range of chemical and biological properties. Imidazole has become an important synthon in the development of new drugs. The derivatives of 1, 3-diazole show different biological activities such as antibacterial, antimycobacterial, anti-inflammatory, antitumor, antidiabetic, anti-allergic, antipyretic, antiviral, antioxidant, anti-amoebic, antihelmintic, antifungal and ulcerogenic activities, etc. as reported in the literature. There are different examples of commercially available drugs in the market which contains 1, 3-diazole ring such as clemizole (antihistaminic agent), etonitazene (analgesic), enviroxime (antiviral), astemizole (antihistaminic agent), omeprazole, pantoprazole (antiulcer), thiabendazole (antihelmintic), nocodazole (antinematodal), metronidazole, nitroso-imidazole (bactericidal), megazol (trypanocidal), azathioprine (anti rheumatoid arthritis), dacarbazine (Hodgkin's disease), tinidazole, ornidazole (antiprotozoal and antibacterial), etc. This present review summarized some pharmacological activities and various kinds of synthetic routes for imidazole and their derived products.
PubMed: 33602331
DOI: 10.1186/s13065-020-00730-1 -
Biologics : Targets & Therapy 2016Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a major cause of cancer death worldwide. HCC is usually asymptomatic at potential curative stages, and it has very poor prognosis if... (Review)
Review
Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is a major cause of cancer death worldwide. HCC is usually asymptomatic at potential curative stages, and it has very poor prognosis if detected later. Thus, the identification of early biomarkers and novel therapies is essential to improve HCC patient survival. Ion channels have been proposed as potential tumor markers and therapeutic targets for several cancers including HCC. Especially, the ether à-go-go-1 (Eag1) voltage-gated potassium channel has been suggested as an early marker for HCC. Eag1 is overexpressed during HCC development from the cirrhotic and the preneoplastic lesions preceding HCC in a rat model. The channel is also overexpressed in human HCC. Astemizole has gained great interest as a potential anticancer drug because it targets several proteins involved in cancer including Eag1. Actually, in vivo studies have shown that astemizole may have clinical utility for HCC prevention and treatment. Here, we will review first some general aspects of HCC including the current biomarkers and therapies, and then we will focus on Eag1 channels as promising tools in the early diagnosis of HCC.
PubMed: 27703327
DOI: 10.2147/BTT.S87402 -
Chemical Research in Toxicology Feb 2021Electrophilically reactive drug metabolites are implicated in many adverse drug reactions. In this mechanism-termed bioactivation-metabolic enzymes convert drugs into...
Electrophilically reactive drug metabolites are implicated in many adverse drug reactions. In this mechanism-termed bioactivation-metabolic enzymes convert drugs into reactive metabolites that often conjugate to nucleophilic sites within biological macromolecules like proteins. Toxic metabolite-product adducts induce severe immune responses that can cause sometimes fatal disorders, most commonly in the form of liver injury, blood dyscrasia, or the dermatologic conditions toxic epidermal necrolysis and Stevens-Johnson syndrome. This study models four of the most common metabolic transformations that result in bioactivation: quinone formation, epoxidation, thiophene sulfur-oxidation, and nitroaromatic reduction, by synthesizing models of metabolism and reactivity. First, the metabolism models predict the formation probabilities of all possible metabolites among the pathways studied. Second, the exact structures of these metabolites are enumerated. Third, using these structures, the reactivity model predicts the reactivity of each metabolite. Finally, a feedfoward neural network converts the metabolism and reactivity predictions to a bioactivation prediction for each possible metabolite. These bioactivation predictions represent the joint probability that a metabolite forms and that this metabolite subsequently conjugates to protein or glutathione. Among molecules bioactivated by these pathways, we predicted the correct pathway with an AUC accuracy of 89.98%. Furthermore, the model predicts whether molecules will be bioactivated, distinguishing bioactivated and nonbioactivated molecules with 81.06% AUC. We applied this algorithm to withdrawn drugs. The known bioactivation pathways of alclofenac and benzbromarone were identified by the algorithm, and high probability bioactivation pathways not yet confirmed were identified for safrazine, zimelidine, and astemizole. This bioactivation model-the first of its kind that jointly considers both metabolism and reactivity-enables drug candidates to be quickly evaluated for a toxicity risk that often evades detection during preclinical trials. The XenoSite bioactivation model is available at http://swami.wustl.edu/xenosite/p/bioactivation.
Topics: Epoxy Compounds; Humans; Models, Biological; Molecular Structure; Nitrobenzenes; Oxidation-Reduction; Quinones; Sulfur; Thiophenes
PubMed: 33496184
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemrestox.0c00417 -
Microbial Pathogenesis Jul 2021Since the beginning of December 2019, a novel Coronavirus severe respiratory disease, caused by Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) which also...
Since the beginning of December 2019, a novel Coronavirus severe respiratory disease, caused by Severe Acute Respiratory Syndrome Coronavirus 2 (SARS-CoV-2) which also been termed 2019-new CoV (2019-nCoV), has continued to spread worldwide. As of August 27, 2020, a total of 24,232,429 people have been infected and 826,518 people have died. In our study, we found that astemizole can antagonize ACE2 and inhibit the entry of SARS-COV-2 spike pseudovirus into ACE2-expressed HEK293T cells (ACE2hi cells). We analysied the binding character of astemizole to ACE2 by molecular docking and surface plasmon resonance (SPR) assays and molecule docking, SARS-COV-2 spike pseudotype virus was also taken to investigate the suppression viropexis effect of astemizole. The results showed that astemizole can bind to the ACE2 receptor and inhibit the invasion of SARS-COV-2 Spike pseudoviruses. Thus astemizole represent potential drug candidates that can be re-used in anti-coronavirus therapies.
Topics: Astemizole; COVID-19; HEK293 Cells; Humans; Molecular Docking Simulation; Pharmaceutical Preparations; Protein Binding; SARS-CoV-2; Spike Glycoprotein, Coronavirus; Virus Internalization
PubMed: 33932547
DOI: 10.1016/j.micpath.2021.104929 -
OncoTargets and Therapy 2017Lung cancer is a major cause of cancer mortality. Thus, novel therapies are urgently needed. Repositioning of old drugs is gaining great interest in cancer treatment....
Lung cancer is a major cause of cancer mortality. Thus, novel therapies are urgently needed. Repositioning of old drugs is gaining great interest in cancer treatment. Astemizole is an antihistamine proposed to be repositioned for cancer therapy. This drug targets several molecules involved in cancer including histamine receptors, ABC transporters and the potassium channels Eag1 and HERG. Astemizole inhibits the proliferation of different cancer cells including those from cervix, breast, leukemia and liver. Gefitinib is widely used to treat lung cancer; however, no response or drug resistance occurs in many cases. Here, we studied the combined effect of astemizole and gefitinib on the proliferation, survival, apoptosis and gene and protein expression of Eag1 channels in the human lung cancer cell lines A549 and NCI-H1975. Cell proliferation and survival were studied by the MTT method and the colony formation assay, respectively; apoptosis was investigated by flow cytometry. Gene expression was assessed by real-time polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR), and protein expression was studied by Western blot analysis and immunocytochemistry. We obtained the inhibitory concentrations 20 and 50 (IC and IC, respectively) values for each drug from the cell proliferation experiments. Drug combination at their IC had a superior effect by reducing cell proliferation and survival in up to 80% and 100%, respectively. The drugs alone did not affect apoptosis of H1975 cells, but the drug combination at their IC increased apoptosis roughly four times in comparison to the effect of the drugs alone. Eag1 mRNA levels and protein expression were decreased by the drug combination in A549 cells, and astemizole induced subcellular localization changes of the channel protein in these cells. Our in vitro studies strongly suggest that the combination astemizole-gefitinib may be a novel and promising therapy for lung cancer patients.
PubMed: 29263676
DOI: 10.2147/OTT.S144506 -
Biophysical Journal May 2020High-throughput in vitro drug assays have been impacted by recent advances in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocyte (hiPSC-CM) technology and by...
High-throughput in vitro drug assays have been impacted by recent advances in human induced pluripotent stem cell-derived cardiomyocyte (hiPSC-CM) technology and by contact-free all-optical systems simultaneously measuring action potentials (APs) and Ca transients (CaTrs). Parallel computational advances have shown that in silico simulations can predict drug effects with high accuracy. We combine these in vitro and in silico technologies and demonstrate the utility of high-throughput experimental data to refine in silico hiPSC-CM populations and to predict and explain drug action mechanisms. Optically obtained hiPSC-CM APs and CaTrs were used from spontaneous activity and under optical pacing in control and drug conditions at multiple doses. An updated version of the Paci2018 model was developed to refine the description of hiPSC-CM spontaneous electrical activity; a population of in silico hiPSC-CMs was constructed and calibrated using simultaneously recorded APs and CaTrs. We tested in silico five drugs (astemizole, dofetilide, ibutilide, bepridil, and diltiazem) and compared the outcomes to in vitro optical recordings. Our simulations showed that physiologically accurate population of models can be obtained by integrating AP and CaTr control records. Thus, constructed population of models correctly predicted the drug effects and occurrence of adverse episodes, even though the population was optimized only based on control data and in vitro drug testing data were not deployed during its calibration. Furthermore, the in silico investigation yielded mechanistic insights; e.g., through simulations, bepridil's more proarrhythmic action in adult cardiomyocytes compared to hiPSC-CMs could be traced to the different expression of ion currents in the two. Therefore, our work 1) supports the utility of all-optical electrophysiology in providing high-content data to refine experimentally calibrated populations of in silico hiPSC-CMs, 2) offers insights into certain limitations when translating results obtained in hiPSC-CMs to humans, and 3) shows the strength of combining high-throughput in vitro and population in silico approaches.
Topics: Action Potentials; Adult; Computer Simulation; Drug Evaluation; Humans; Induced Pluripotent Stem Cells; Myocytes, Cardiac
PubMed: 32298635
DOI: 10.1016/j.bpj.2020.03.018 -
International Journal of Molecular... Sep 2022Despite the significant progress made towards comprehending the deregulated signatures in lung cancer, these vary from study to study. We reanalyzed 25 studies from the...
Despite the significant progress made towards comprehending the deregulated signatures in lung cancer, these vary from study to study. We reanalyzed 25 studies from the Gene Expression Omnibus (GEO) to detect and annotate co-deregulated signatures in lung cancer and in single-gene or single-drug perturbation experiments. We aimed to decipher the networks that these co-deregulated genes (co-DEGs) form along with their upstream regulators. Differential expression and upstream regulators were computed using Characteristic Direction and Systems Biology tools, including GEO2Enrichr and X2K. Co-deregulated gene expression profiles were further validated across different molecular and immune subtypes in lung adenocarcinoma (TCGA-LUAD) and lung adenocarcinoma (TCGA-LUSC) datasets, as well as using immunohistochemistry data from the Human Protein Atlas, before being subjected to subsequent GO and KEGG enrichment analysis. The functional alterations of the co-upregulated genes in lung cancer were mostly related to immune response regulating the cell surface signaling pathway, in contrast to the co-downregulated genes, which were related to S-nitrosylation. Networks of hub proteins across the co-DEGs consisted of overlapping TFs (SOX2, MYC, KAT2A) and kinases (MAPK14, CSNK2A1 and CDKs). Furthermore, using Connectivity Map we highlighted putative repurposing drugs, including valproic acid, betonicine and astemizole. Similarly, we analyzed the co-DEG signatures in single-gene and single-drug perturbation experiments in lung cancer cell lines. In summary, we identified critical co-DEGs in lung cancer providing an innovative framework for their potential use in developing personalized therapeutic strategies.
Topics: Adenocarcinoma of Lung; Astemizole; Gene Expression Regulation, Neoplastic; Humans; Lung Neoplasms; Mitogen-Activated Protein Kinase 14; Transcription Factors; Valproic Acid
PubMed: 36142846
DOI: 10.3390/ijms231810933 -
Methods in Molecular Biology (Clifton,... 2022Human ether-a-go-go-related gene (hERG) channel plays an essential role in the repolarization of the cardiac action potential. Genetic mutations and some chemicals/drugs...
Human ether-a-go-go-related gene (hERG) channel plays an essential role in the repolarization of the cardiac action potential. Genetic mutations and some chemicals/drugs interfere with hERG channel activity, which may prolong the QT interval and potentially cause long QT syndrome. The FluxOR™ thallium flux assay performed in two cell lines, U2OS and HEK293, with stable hERG expression can be used to identify compounds that inhibit hERG channel activity. This chapter describes a cell-based hERG channel inhibition assay that has been optimized and performed in a 1536-well plate format. The homogeneous and robust assay can be used to identify compounds that inhibit hERG channel activity.
Topics: Action Potentials; Ether-A-Go-Go Potassium Channels; HEK293 Cells; Humans; Long QT Syndrome; Research Design
PubMed: 35294752
DOI: 10.1007/978-1-0716-2213-1_3