PLoS ONE (Jan 2014)

A porphodimethene chemical inhibitor of uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase.

  • Kenneth W Yip,
  • Zhan Zhang,
  • Noriko Sakemura-Nakatsugawa,
  • Jui-Wen Huang,
  • Nhu Mai Vu,
  • Yi-Kun Chiang,
  • Chih-Lung Lin,
  • Jennifer Y Y Kwan,
  • Shijun Yue,
  • Yulia Jitkova,
  • Terence To,
  • Payam Zahedi,
  • Emil F Pai,
  • Aaron D Schimmer,
  • Jonathan F Lovell,
  • Jonathan L Sessler,
  • Fei-Fei Liu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0089889
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 2
p. e89889

Abstract

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Uroporphyrinogen decarboxylase (UROD) catalyzes the conversion of uroporphyrinogen to coproporphyrinogen during heme biosynthesis. This enzyme was recently identified as a potential anticancer target; its inhibition leads to an increase in reactive oxygen species, likely mediated by the Fenton reaction, thereby decreasing cancer cell viability and working in cooperation with radiation and/or cisplatin. Because there is no known chemical UROD inhibitor suitable for use in translational studies, we aimed to design, synthesize, and characterize such a compound. Initial in silico-based design and docking analyses identified a potential porphyrin analogue that was subsequently synthesized. This species, a porphodimethene (named PI-16), was found to inhibit UROD in an enzymatic assay (IC50 = 9.9 µM), but did not affect porphobilinogen deaminase (at 62.5 µM), thereby exhibiting specificity. In cellular assays, PI-16 reduced the viability of FaDu and ME-180 cancer cells with half maximal effective concentrations of 22.7 µM and 26.9 µM, respectively, and only minimally affected normal oral epithelial (NOE) cells. PI-16 also combined effectively with radiation and cisplatin, with potent synergy being observed in the case of cisplatin in FaDu cells (Chou-Talalay combination index <1). This work presents the first known synthetic UROD inhibitor, and sets the foundation for the design, synthesis, and characterization of higher affinity and more effective UROD inhibitors.