IE911971A1 - Treatment of disease - Google Patents
Treatment of diseaseInfo
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- IE911971A1 IE911971A1 IE197191A IE197191A IE911971A1 IE 911971 A1 IE911971 A1 IE 911971A1 IE 197191 A IE197191 A IE 197191A IE 197191 A IE197191 A IE 197191A IE 911971 A1 IE911971 A1 IE 911971A1
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- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K31/00—Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
- A61K31/21—Esters, e.g. nitroglycerine, selenocyanates
- A61K31/215—Esters, e.g. nitroglycerine, selenocyanates of carboxylic acids
- A61K31/235—Esters, e.g. nitroglycerine, selenocyanates of carboxylic acids having an aromatic ring attached to a carboxyl group
- A61K31/24—Esters, e.g. nitroglycerine, selenocyanates of carboxylic acids having an aromatic ring attached to a carboxyl group having an amino or nitro group
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K31/00—Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
- A61K31/33—Heterocyclic compounds
- A61K31/395—Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins
- A61K31/41—Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having five-membered rings with two or more ring hetero atoms, at least one of which being nitrogen, e.g. tetrazole
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K31/00—Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
- A61K31/33—Heterocyclic compounds
- A61K31/395—Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins
- A61K31/495—Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having six-membered rings with two or more nitrogen atoms as the only ring heteroatoms, e.g. piperazine or tetrazines
- A61K31/50—Pyridazines; Hydrogenated pyridazines
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K31/00—Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
- A61K31/33—Heterocyclic compounds
- A61K31/395—Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins
- A61K31/495—Heterocyclic compounds having nitrogen as a ring hetero atom, e.g. guanethidine or rifamycins having six-membered rings with two or more nitrogen atoms as the only ring heteroatoms, e.g. piperazine or tetrazines
- A61K31/505—Pyrimidines; Hydrogenated pyrimidines, e.g. trimethoprim
-
- A—HUMAN NECESSITIES
- A61—MEDICAL OR VETERINARY SCIENCE; HYGIENE
- A61K—PREPARATIONS FOR MEDICAL, DENTAL OR TOILETRY PURPOSES
- A61K31/00—Medicinal preparations containing organic active ingredients
- A61K31/655—Azo (—N=N—), diazo (=N2), azoxy (>N—O—N< or N(=O)—N<), azido (—N3) or diazoamino (—N=N—N<) compounds
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- Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
- Medicinal Chemistry (AREA)
- Pharmacology & Pharmacy (AREA)
- Epidemiology (AREA)
- Life Sciences & Earth Sciences (AREA)
- Animal Behavior & Ethology (AREA)
- General Health & Medical Sciences (AREA)
- Public Health (AREA)
- Veterinary Medicine (AREA)
- Emergency Medicine (AREA)
- Agricultural Chemicals And Associated Chemicals (AREA)
- Plural Heterocyclic Compounds (AREA)
- Pharmaceuticals Containing Other Organic And Inorganic Compounds (AREA)
Abstract
Treatment of polycythemia vera or hyperbilirubinaemia by administering a compound which is a specific inhibitor of the enzymatic conversion of protoporphyrinogen to heme in mammalian cells.
Description
TREATMENT OF DISEASE
One aspect of this invention relates to the treatment of polycythemia vera, a disease in which there is an increased production of myeloid elements (that is materials produced in the bone marrow), particularly hemoglobin and red blood cells. Late in the disease the spleen (which functions to remove matured red cells from the blood) becomes greatly enlarged. The disease generally begins in late middle life. Patients receiving no therapy survive only about two years. Treatment by repeated phlebotomy (bleeding) has extended survival time to 10 to 12 years. Other treatments have included suppression of marrow function by radiation or chemotherapy with alkylating agents such as melphalan, busulfan and chlorambucil (which may lead to leukemia or other neoplasms) or with hydroxyurea which inhibits DNA synthesis.
In this invention patients with polycythemia vera are treated with an enzyme-inhibitor agent which inhibits the enzymatic conversion of protoporphyrinogen to heme in the cells of the body. We have ascertained that agents, such as certain types of herbicidal compounds, which inhibit the enzymatic conversion of protoporphyrinogen to chlorophyl in plant cells also inhibit the enzymatic conversion of protoporphyrinogen to heme in mammalian cells. We believe that the inhibition by such agents probably affects the step of conversion of protoporphyrinogen to protoporphyrin IX by an enzyme (protoporphyrinogen oxidase) so that the protoporphyrinogen cannot follow the normal enzymatic pathway to protoporphyrin IX but instead becomes oxidized in the cell (for example in the cytosol) but outside the normal enzymatic pathway (for example outside the organelle membrane) and that the result is
-2an accumulation of protoporphyrin IX in locations where it is unavailable for the normal conversion to heme.
The effect of the agent on the enzymatic pathway is shown, for instance, in experiments in which cultures of human tumor cells (for example HeLa cells) are grown in the dark in the presence of, say, a concentration of about l or 10 to 100 μΜ of the agent, producing excess protoporphyrin IX in both the cells and the culture medium.
Treatment with the enzyme-inhibiting agent may be effected by ingestion (for example orally) or injection (for example intravenous or intraperitoneal injection). For this purpose the agent may be incorporated into conventional pharmaceutical preparations such as tablets, (for example compressed tablets which may be coated, as with sugar paste and/or syrup), suppositories, capsules (for example hard or soft gelatine capsules), suspensions, solutions, powders or ampules. In such preparations the agent may be present in admixture with a pharmacologically acceptable solid and/or liquid carrier which may, if desired, be a nutrient; for example it may be a solid such as corn starch or a liquid diluent such as water or an edible oil or mineral oil or a solvent, for example dimethyl sulfoxide. For injection the enzyme-inhibiting agent may be used as a sterile composition comprising the agent dissolved or dispersed in a pharmaceutically acceptable carrier, for example as an aqueous isotonic solution such as aqueous saline (for example 0.9% NaCl) or Dulbecco's phosphate saline (PBS) at a concentration of, say, 2.5 mg mL1, or comprising the agent in a liposomal system such as one prepared with a phospholipid vesicle in a manner such as described at pages 1659-1660 of Remington's Pharmaceutical Sciences,
1985, (17th edition), published by Mack Publishing
-3Company. For instance, analogously to the formulation described by Jori et al., Br. J. Cancer (1983), 48 at page 307, 51.4 mg. of dipalmitoyl-diphosphatidylcholine may be dissolved in 10 mL of a 1 mM solution of the agent in chloroform-methanol (9:1, v/v), and after thorough mixing the solvent may be removed under vacuum at 30°C, giving a solid which may be resuspended in 10 mL of 0.01M phosphate buffer at pH 7.4 containing 150 mM NaCl, and the cloudy solution then sonicated for 30 minutes at 50°C.
It may be desirable, especially for oral administration, to employ enzyme-inhibiting agents which are water-soluble salts or which are acidic and form water-soluble sodium or potassium salts, such as an acidic sulfonamide of the type disclosed in International applications (PCT) W0 87/03782 or WO 85/001939 and WO 87/037873 (for example agents 6c and 8h below) or a water-soluble salt thereof, or a carboxylic acid or water-soluble salt thereof such as the sodium salt known as acifluorfen.
The best route of administration and the dosage with the best therapeutic ratio may be determined by routine experimentation, well known in the art. Thus, the enzyme-inhibiting agent may be administered to laboratory animals such as rats or mice to determine the effect of various doses on red blood cell count and blood hemoglobin content. It may be tested in vitro, using bone marrow cells from polycythemia vera patients, such as the erythroleukemic cell line known as A.T.C.C. K562 (which cell line is referred to in, for instance, an article by Bridges in J. Biol. Chem., 260 (11), 6811-6815 of June 10, 1985). Based on data from such in vitro and animal experiments, plus further animal experimentation (including conventional short and long term toxicity studies with larger mammals such
-4as dogs or pigs), dosage trials for humans would be initiated in accordance with protocols that insure safety and full disclosure (according to institutional Human Experimentation Review Boards as required by law and the policies of the medical centers in which the trials are conducted).
In tests on rats and mice, agent 8h (described below) was added to the diet of the animals in concentration of 3000 ppm, for 13 weeks, resulting in a significant decrease in erythrocyte counts, hemoglobin levels, hematocrit levels, mean corpuscular volume and mean corpuscular hemoglobin content, without inhibiting the production of white blood cells. After a 28 day recovery period in which the agent was omitted from the diet, hemoglobin and hematocrit levels returned to normal.
Another aspect of the invention relates to the use of the same enzyme-inhibiting agents to treat neonatal jaundice or hyperbilirubinaemia. As discussed in U.S.
patent 4,831,024 and references cited therein, inhibitors of heme oxygenase such as zinc and tin protoporphyrin have been used for this purpose, presumably because they inhibit the conversion of heme to bilirubin. We expect that our enzyme-inhibiting agents which cause an accumulation of protoporphyrin in locations where it is unavailable for the normal conversion to heme will also reduce the production of abnormal amounts of bilirubin. The treatment may be employed for treatment of infants who exhibit above30 normal carbon monoxide production, as determined by the known screening test for that purpose and who thus are considered to be of increased risk of serious jaundice; see the test described in the articles by Smith et al discussed in U.S. patent 4,831,024, for example. For preliminary tests on animals to help establish the
-5dosage and node of administration in conventional manner, rats of the mutant strain of Wistar rats (socalled Gunn rats which have hereditary acholuric jaundice) may be used, as described in the literature cited in that U.S. patent.
The enzyme inhibiting agents of this invention are specific inhibitors of the enzymatic conversion of protoporphyrinogen to heme in the sense that they do not operate as general enzyme poisons such as denaturing or cross-linking agents (for example sulfhydryl reagents), preferably they are not materials which affect the oxidation conditions such as electron acceptors; thus, preferred agents for this invention have redox potentials more negative than about -500 mV, such as more negative than -800 mV (measured, for instance in the conventional manner in an aprotic solvent for the agent, as by cyclic voltametry or polarographically). It is also preferred that the agent not be a tetrapyrrole and that its I5Q for proto20 porphyrinogen oxidase be less than about 10 μΜ (a pi50 greater than about 5), more preferably less than about 1 μκι (a PI50 greater than about 6) such as less than about 0.3 μΜ, for example an I50 of about 0.1 or 0.03 or 0.01 μΜ or less.
The enzyme-inhibiting agent is preferably one which has a high capacity for disrupting the plasmalemma of plant material. One test for that capacity is the Efflux Experiment described in the article by Hailing and Peters in Plant Physiology, 84, 1114-5 (1987). In such a test (described in more detail in Appendix A below), preferred agents show a total efflux of at least 50% at a treatment rate of 100 μΜ, preferably at a treatment rate of 1 μΜ or less, such as 100 nM; highly active materials, such as l-(4-chloro-2-fluoro35 5-propargyloxyphenyl)-3-methyl-4-difluoromethyl-A^1,2,4-triazolin-5-one or lactophen (described below),
-6give total efflux percentages of over 90% at 100 nM concentration.
Another test of the capacity of a material for disrupting the plasmalemma of plant material is the
Light-Induced Greening Inhibition Test described more particularly in Appendix B below. This test measures the capacity to inhibit the light-greening of darkbleached Chlamydomonas reinhardi mutant y-1 (a type of algae which when grown in the dark does not make chlorophyll, so that the mass of algae becomes bleached owing to the presence of new non-green cells, and which produces chlorophyll again when it is exposed to light). Many of the preferred compounds (agents) used in this invention have the ability to inhibit the light-greening by at least 50% when the compound is used at a concentration of 105M, more preferably at a concentration of 10'6M or less, for example 10'7M. However, compounds which are ionized in water, such as compounds like 6c in which the operative ion is negatively charged do not respond well in this test; apparently the algal cells resist entry of the acidic group. In addition, many of the preferred compounds, when used at said concentration in the Light-Greening Inhibition Test, give a supernatant which shows a light absorption peak at about 405 nm which is higher than the chlorophyll peak (the peak at about 668 nm in this system), for example the supernatant shows a 405 nm peak whose height is 2, 3 or 4 times the height of the 668 nm peak.
Among the enzyme-inhibiting agents which may be employed in the practice of this invention are herbicidal compounds of the following classes (A to G):
A. Aryl heterocyclic herbicides of the general formula
-7Ph-NHet where Ph is a substituted phenyl, preferably 2,4-disubstituted phenyl, more preferably a 2,4,5-trisub5 stituted phenyl, and NHet is a 5- or 6-membered heterocyclic ring having one to four ring-nitrogen atoms and having the formula
-N-C=O or -N-C-OH or -N-C-Cl 10 'J ι \\ ι \\
Q Q—C—R Q—C —R where Q represents the balance of the heterocyclic ring and R represents hydrogen or a substituent group. This class of compounds includes such materials as those designated as the cyclic imide class of herbicides in an article by Wakabayashi et al., J. Pesticide Sci. 11, 635-460 (1986) which shows the following compounds in its Fig. 1:
Compound I is an aryl oxadiazole herbicide, namely 2-tert-butyl-4-(2,4-dichloro-5-isopropoxyphenyl)-Δ21,3,4-oxadiazolin-5-one. Other 2-alkyl-4-(2,4,5trisubstituted phenyl)-δ2-1,3,4-oxadiazolin-5-ones which may be used in the present invention are disclosed, for instance, in U.S. patents 3,385,862; 3,836,539; and 3,876,413.
-8Compound II is an aryl tetrahydroindazole herbicide, namely 3-chloro-2-(4-chloro-2-fluoro-5isopropoxyphenyl)-4,5,6,7-tetrahydro-2H-indazole.
Other 3-substituted-2-(2,4,5-trisubstituted phenyl) tetrahydro indazoles which may be used in the present invention are disclosed, for instance, in U.S. patent 4,670,043.
Compounds III, IV and V are aryl tetrahydrophthalimide herbicides. Other aryl tetrahydrophthalimides which may be employed in the present invention are disclosed, for instance, in U.S. patents 4,431,822; 4,670,046; 4,670,042; and 4,439,229 and published International application (PCT) WO 87/07602. The latter two citations above also disclose other NHet rings which may be used, such rings being illustrated, for example, at column 4 line 25 to column 5 line 20 of
U.S. 4,439,229 and at pages 12 to 14 of WO 87/07602.
Other suitable herbicides of the PH-NHet type are: aryl triazolinones, such as those disclosed in U.S.
patents 4,318,731; 4,398,943; 4,404,019; 4,702,945; 4,705,557; 4,702,763; 4,761,174 and International applications (PCT) WO 85/01637, WO 85/04307, WO 87/00730, WO 87/03782, WO 86/04481, and WO 88/01133;
aryl tetrazolinones, such as those disclosed in
U.S. patents 4,734,124 and International applications (PCT) WO 85/01939 and WO 87/03873;
aryl triazinediones, such as those disclosed in U.S. patents 4,755,217 and 4,766,233 International application (PCT) WO 86/00072;
aryl hydantoins, such as those disclosed in U.S.
patent 4,427,438;
aryl imidazolopyrimidines, such as those disclosed in West German patent DT 2604989 (Derwent Abstracts accession No. 65326X), Japanese Kokai J60-158147A (Derwent Abstracts accession No. 85-240363), and
9European published patent application EP 230874 (Derwent Abstracts accession No. 87-215141);
aryl pyridyldiazines, such as compounds of the type of compound 8x of Example 8 below;
aryl diazinediones, such as compounds of the type of compounds 8e and 8v of Example 8 below;
aryl pyradiazinones, such as compounds of the type of compound 8f of Example 8 below;
aryl oxadiazolinones, such as those disclosed in 10 Japanese Kokai J59-148769 (Derwent Abstracts accession
No. 84-246947) or Japanese Kokai J62-161772 (Derwent Abstracts accession No. 87-238787);
aryl oxadiazinones, such as compounds of the type of compounds 8k and 8m of Example 8 below;
aryl benzamidazoles, such as compounds of the type of compound 8ad of Example 8 below;
aryl iminotriazolopyridazines, such as those disclosed in U.S. patents 4,913,723; 4,906,281; and 4,906,279;
aryl thiazoles, such as compounds of the type of compounds 8L, 8r and 8ah of Example 8 below;
aryl pyrroles, such as those disclosed in European published patent applications EP 255601 (Derwent accession No. 88-037583) and EP 260288 (Derwent accession No. 88-127433);
aryl urazoles, such as those disclosed in U.S patent 4,452,981; and aryl hexahydropyridazines, such as those disclosed in U.S. patent 4,619,687.
B. Aryl heterocyclic urethanes, such as those disclosed in U.S. patent 4,521,242.
C, Aryl heterocyclic ureas, such as those disclosed in Japanese Kokai J58-225081 (Derwent Abstracts accession No. 84-034261).
D. Aryl amides, such as compounds of the type of
-10compounds 8aj and 8ak of Example 8 below.
E. Phenyl ether herbicides, such as those having a p-halo or p-nitro phenoxyphenyl structure, such as the following commercially available materials:
- (2-ch‘loro-4-(trifluoromethyl) phenoxy)-2-nitro-N-methanesulfonylbenzamide (fomesafen)
sodium 5-(2-chloro-4-(trifluoromethyl) phenoxy) -2-nitrobenzoate
methyl 5-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)2-nitrobenzoate (bifenox)
2-chloro-l-(3-ethoxy-4-nitrophenoxy)-4-trifluoromethylbenzene
Other suitable commercially available diphenyl ether herbicides are lactophen: 1-(carboethoxy)ethyl 5-(2-chloro-4trifluoromethylphenoxy)-2-nitrobenzoate, fluoroglycofen: (carboethoxy)methyl 5-(2-chloro-4trifluoromethylphenoxy)-2-nitrobenzoate, chloronitrofen: 2,4,6-trichloro-(4-nitrophenoxy)benzene,
-11fluorodifen: 2-nitro-l-(4-nitrophenoxy)-4-trifluoromethylbenzene, nitrofen: 2,4-dichloror-l-(4-nitrophenoxy)benzene, chlomethoxyfen: 4-(2,4-dichlorophenoxy)-2-methoxy5 1-nitrobenzen.
Still ‘another suitable diphenyl ether herbicide is methyl 5-(2-chloro-4-trifluoromethylphenoxy)-2-nitroacetophenone oxime-O-acetate.
F. Aryl pyrazole herbicides such as those dis10 closed in U.S. patents 4,563,210; 4,496,390; and
4,459,150 and German Offenlegungsschrift 3520327 Al.
G. Compounds of the formula
where X*3 is 0 or S and Ph” has the meaning described above, such as compounds disclosed in published European patent application 273417 or Derwent Abstracts accession no. 87-040749.
Some enzyme-inhibiting herbicides are disclosed in
Matringe et al., FEBS Letters. Vol. 245. no. 1, 2, pages 35-38 (1989) and Yanase et al., Pesticide Biochemistry and Physiology. Vol. 35, pages 70-80 (1989).
Some specific treating agents are:
o if (f
Ο '3
-17Br.
β X.
Γ Μ W
Ο
IE 91197^
F
-21Determination of Ιςη (a) Using enzyme in intact chloroplasts:
Protoporphyrinoqen IX (Protogen IX). Proto IX was purchased from Porphyrin Products, Logan, UT and purified as outlined by T. P. Fuesler et al., Plant Physiol.. 67. 246-249 (1981). Protogen IX was freshly prepared by reduction of Proto IX with a Na/Hg amalgam as outlined by N. J. Jacobs and J. M. Jacobs, Enzyme.
28., 206-219 (1982), utilizing the purified Proto IX at a concentration of 300 μΜ.
Plant Material. Cucumber (Cucumis sativus L. cultivar 'Wisconsin SMR18') was raised in a dark growth chamber on vermiculite irrigated with a commercial (915 45-15) fertilizer. The seedlings were grown at 25°C and a relative humidity of 80 to 90%. Intermittent illumination, one minute of light per 60 minute cycle with a measured intensity of 25 μΕ/m-2 sec-1 (PAR), was supplied by a General Electric 'Bright Stick' controlled by an electronic timer. This provided tissue capable of rapid chlorophyll synthesis while minimizing starch reserves and initial chlorophyll levels.
Chloroplast Isolation. Developing chloroplasts were isolated as described by T. P. Fuesler et al.,
Plant Physiol.. 75. 662-664 (1984), except that in the final purification step, plastids were centrifuged through a 40% rather than 45% (v/v) Percoll cushion.
The chloroplasts were resuspended in an assay buffer containing 0.5 M mannitol, 20 mM TES, 10 mM HEPES, pH 7.7, 1 mM EDTA, 1 mM MgCl2, 1% (w/v) bovine serum albumin and 1 mM dithioerythritol to a final concentration of 2 mg protein/mL.
Assays of Protoporphyrinoqen Oxidase. Assays were conducted as outlined by J. M. Jacobs and N. J. Jacobs,
-22Arch. Biochem. Biophvs.. 229. 312-319 (1984). Samples (0.2 mL) of the chloroplasts suspension were preincubated in the dark for 15 minutes with various concentrations of acifluorfen-methyl (AFM’1) or with
0.2% (v/v) acetone (as a control). Then fifty pL of freshly prepared Protogen IX (about 15 nM), was added to the suspension to initiate the reaction. Assays were terminated by the addition of 2.75 mL of the fluorometric media of N. J. Jacobs and J. M. Jacobs,
Enzyme. 28, 206-219 (1982) consisting of 1% (v/v)
Tween-20 (polyoxyethylene sorbitan monolaurate), 50 mM Tris-HCl, pH 8.5, 1 mM EDTA; 1 mM dithioerythritol (DTE) was substituted for 5 mM gluthathione. The suspensions were then read directly on a SPEX
Fluorolog-2 spectroflourometer equipped with a frontface fluorescence option for turbid biological samples. The amount of Proto IX produced was quantified from a standard curve (of quantity of Proto IX versus emission at 630 nm, on excitation at 400 nm) generated from purified Proto IX in fluorometric media.
To determine the amount of nonenzymatic oxidation to Proto IX in the above assay, the same assay was carried out except that in place of the suspension of active chloroplasts, there was used a suspension in which the chloroplasts had been inactivated by heating for 15 minutes at 85°C. Subtracting the quantity of Proto IX thus produced from the quantity produced in the presence of the active chloroplasts gave the amount of Proto IX formed enzymatically. The results are shown graphically in Figure I (in which LSD indicates least significant difference, as is conventional). Figure I shows that the I50 value (the concentration which provides 50% inhibition) is less than 0.1 μΜ, i. e., about 0.03 μΜ.
Assays of the effect of 10 μΐη AFM on the enzymatic
-23conversion of Proto IX to magnesium Proto IX in the chloroplast suspension (in the presence of ATP) showed that AFM had no inhibiting effect on that conversion.
(b) Using isolated enzyme:
Plant Material and Homogenization: Peas (Pisum sativum var. Little Marvel) germinated at 20°C in a dark growth chamber ten days. Plants were illuminated for one hour per day, which allowed for significant leaf expansion while minimizing chlorophyll synthesis. Leaves were pale yellow-green in color.
The leaves were then homogenized in 500 mL of grinding media consisting of 0.5 M mannitol, 10 mM HEPES, 20 mM TES, 1 mM EDTA, ImM MgCl2, 5mM cysteine, and 0.2 BSA, pH 7.7. The brei was then passed through four layers of cheesecloth, then through a 43-micron nylon mesh. The hemogenate was then centrifuged at 4000 g for 3 minutes. The resultant pellet was utilized for plastid isolation.
Etioplast Isolation and Purification: The pellet (plastid fraction) was resuspended in 40 mL of assay media (grinding media minus cysteine and containing ImM DTE and 1% ESA) and centrifuged at 150 g to remove cellular debris. The resultant supernatant was centrifuged at 4000 g, and the resuspended pellets were overlaid on 40% Percoll. After centrifugation for 3 minutes at 6500 g, intact etioplasts pelleted at the bottom of the tube.
Protein content was determined utilizing the BioRad method.
Enzyme Solubilization: The enzyme was solubilized following the procedure of Jacobs and Jacobs. The plastids were pelleted and resuspended in 2.5 mL of buffer consisting of 20 mM Tris-MCl, 30% glycerol, and
1 mM DTE, pH 7.6. After sonification at 60mHz, a volume of detergent extraction media, 10% Triton 100X,
-248% KCl, and 10 mM PMSF, was added to give a final detergent:protein ratio of 0.7 (W/W). After three hours at 48°C, the membrane preparation were ultracentrifuged at 100,000 g for 1 hr. on a Beckman L2-65B.
Gel Filtration: The supernatants containing the solubilized enzyme were then desalted on a Pharmacia PD-10 G-25M Sephadex column. Columns were washed with 25 mL of Elution Buffer (20 mM Bistris-HCl, 20% glycerol, 0.1% Triton X, pH 6.8). Samples were loaded onto the column and eluted with 3.5 mL of buffer. The first mL fraction was discarded while the remaining 2.5 mL was collected. These fractions were then frozen under N2 at -77°C.
Purification Utilizing DEAE Chromatography: A 0.75 mL volume of plastid-solubilized-enzyme preparation was loaded onto a Waters Protein-Pak DEAE-5PW column (8mm x 7.5cm) equilibrated with Elution Buffer. After 60 minutes of washing with Elution Buffer (ImL/minute), the enzyme was eluted with a linear 0.1M NaCl gradient over 100 minutes. The gradient was then changed from 0.1M NaCl to 0.8 M NaCl in 30 minutes. Four-mL fractions were collected and assayed for activity.
Peaks were detected using a Waters 494 UV detector at 260 nm, sensitivity:1AU.
Protoporphyrinogen Oxidase Activity: Enzymatic conversion of protoporphyrinogen IX to protoporphyrin IX was assayed as described in section (a) above.
In this test, compound 6c showed I5Q values of 0.8 to 0.3 μΜ (corresponding to a ΡΙ50 of 6.1 to 6.5, where
PI50 is negative log of the I5Q Molarity); for AFM the value was 0.08 μΜ (plso of 7.1) and for compound 8v the value was 0.08 to 0.03 μΜ (plso of 7·! to 7.5).
-25Appendix A Percent Efflux Test
The Percent Efflux test employs cotyledons harvested from etiolated cucumber seedlings. In an initial step a mass of cotyledons is treated in the dark with an aqueous buffered solution containing a radiolabelled sugar. The amount of the sugar taken up by the cotyledons is then measured (by counting, as described below). The mass of cotyledons is then divided into two portions; one portion of the cotyledons is treated in the dark with an aqueous buffered solution containing the compound to be tested, while the other portion is treated in the same way, in the dark, with an otherwise identical solution without the test compound, as a control. The cotyledons, in contact with the aqueous solutions, are then exposed to light for 16 hours, and then separated from the aqueous solutions; the latter are then measured (by counting) to determine their contents of radiolabelled material. The results are expressed as Percent Efflux which is calculated as follows, where S is the count of radiolabelled material (per cotyledon) taken up by the cotyledons in their initial treatment, is the count of radiolabelled material (per cotyledon) in the aqueous solution containing the compound to be tested, after the exposure to light and Sc is the count of radiolabelled material (per cotyledon) in the aqueous solution of the control, after exposure to light:
S
c
Percent Efflux = _
S
More specifically, the following materials and conditions are employed in the Percent Efflux test.
-26Plant material: Cucumber seed (Cucumis sativus L. cultivar 'Wisconsin SMR 18') was germinated and grown in vermiculite irrigated with a commercial (9-45-15) fertilizer. Seedlings were grown at 25°C and 80-90% RH in a dark incubation chamber. Cotyledons were harvested from the etiolated seedlings five days after planting and were rinsed in 1.0 mM CaCl2, all under green light.
Buffered solution: 1 mM KCl, ImM CaCl2 and 2.OmM 10 potassium phosphate, adjusted to pH 6.5 (as with NaOH).
Radiolabelled sugar: 3-0-methyl-3-[U-14C]glucose of specific activity 10.9 GBq/mmol (Amersham Corp., Arlington Heights IL).
Initial treatment: Washed cotyledons (180 to 230) 15 are added to a 250 mL widemouth foam-stoppered
Erlenmeyer flask containing 50 mL of the buffered solution, and the radiolabelled sugar is added in an amount to give a concentration of 600 nM thereof in the solution. The flask is shaken for 24 hours at 125 rpm on a gyratory shaker in the dark. The cotyledons are then recovered on a nylon mesh and rinsed three times in 20 mL volumes of ImM CaCl2· The uptake of the radiolabelled sugar is measured by digesting three samples of five cotyledons each in NCS tissue solubilizer (Amersham Corp.) and counting the resulting macerate in a liquid scintillation spectrometer.
(Results from these digestions were found to be equivalent to the same determination made by combusting sampled cotyledons in an autooxidizer.)
Treatment with compound to be tested (and control treatment):
Five of the cotyledons are floated, abaxial side up, on 3 mL of the buffered solution in a 35 mm diameter covered plastic petri dish. The test compound
-27is then added (as a solution thereof in acetone) in such amount as to give a predetermined concentration (discussed below) of the test compound in the buffered solution; the acetone concentration in the buffered solution is then 0.1% (v/v) in the control as well as in the solution containing the test compound. The floating cotyledons are then swirled by shaking the dishes at 90 rpm on the surface of a gyratory shaker for 16 hours.
Exposure to light: The dishes containing the cotyledons floating on the solutions are exposed for 16 hours to illumination provided by four GE F20T12-CW fluorescent lamps at a measured intensity of 150μΕ m“2 sec-1 in the photosynthetically active region of the spectrum (PAR) (measured at the surface of the cotyledons) while the dishes are being shaken.
Measurement of amount of radiolabelled material in the liquid: All the liquid is separated from the cotyledons and then counted in a liquid scintillation spectrometer.
Darkness: All treatments prior to the illumination step are carried out in the dark or under green fluorescent light (that is light filtered through a green plastic cut-off filter which passes light of 45025 600 nm).
Appendix B
Culture Media
Medium M
Salts Molaritv Stock mL Stock/L Na Citrate·6Η2Ο 1.7 X 10’3M 10% 5 Trace Metals as below as below 10 FeCl3*6H2O 0.37 x 10‘3M 1% 1 CaCl2*2H2O 0.36 X 10’3M 5.3% 1
MgSO4*7H2O 1.2 x 10’3M 10% 3 NH4NO3 3.7 x 10‘3M 10% 3 kh2po4 2.2 x 10'3M 10% 3 R k2hpo4 1.7 X 10-3M 10% 3 Stock of Trace Metals Mixture H3BO3 100 mg/L ZnSO4’7H2O 100 mg/L MnSO4’4H2O 40 mg/L 10 COC12’6H2O 20 mg/lL NaMo04’2H20 20 mg/L CuSO4 4 mg/L 15 Culture Medium A is prepared by adding 10 mL/L of an aqueous, 10% sodium acetate solution (7.5 x 10‘3M)
to Medium M.
The components are added to distilled water in the order listed above and are autoclaved at 15 psi for 15 minutes.
Stock Cultures Grown in the Presence of Light
Stock Cultures of y-1 cells are maintained axenically in liquid culture on Medium A or M, preferably on Medium M, in a 14/10 hour liqht/dark cycle at 25°C in Erlenmeyer flasks which are stoppered with polyurethane plugs. The stock cultures are incubated without supplemental aeration on rotary shakers at 125 rpm. The light intensity at the culture level is 120 μΕ m‘2 sec'1 (PAR) . Under these conditions the cultures are in a semi-synchronous mode of growth until they reach a stationary phase of 2-4 χ 106 cells/mL.
Cultures Grown Without Light (Dark-Grown Culture)
Cells from the stationary phase of stock cultures grown in the presence of light (7.5 mL) are transferred
-29to 750 mL of Medium A in an Erlenmeyer flask. The cells are incubated in the dark, with aeration through a submersed aeration tube, at 25°C for three to four days. During this period this culture of y-1 cells will undergo seven to eight cell divisions, losing all visible chlorophyll, and the concentration should be 23 x 106 cells/mL.
Preparation of Cells for Use in Assay
Cells are harvested from a freshly prepared darkgrown culture (750 mL) by low speed centrifugation, that is, about 2000 rpm, for approximately five minutes at about 20°C. The cells are gently resuspended in 50 mL of Medium A. A sample of this suspension (approxi15 mately 0.25 mL) should be examined for motility and, after fixation with an aqueous, 1% gluteraldehyde solution, a cell count should be made to determine the number of cells/mL. A normal cell count is about 5 x 107 cells/mL. Aliquots of 1 mL (107 cells/mL) are placed into the testing vessels (for example, Falcontf 24-well tissue culture plates). At this point the cells are very motile and are yellow in color.
The test compound is dissolved in a solvent (acetone, ethanol, dimethylsulfoxide, or water, preferably acetone) to provide a concentration which is 1000 times the final concentration. One ^L of this test solution is added to each of two wells with a 5 or 10 μϊ, microsyringe.
Four control wells per tissue culture plate are prepared in the manner described above without the test compound present. The tissue culture plates are covered with a transparent plastic cover and are placed in a growth chamber with a light intensity of 70-90 μΕ m'2 sec'1 for 13-16 hours at 25°C. If the contents of the test wells appear yellow, they are extracted as
-30described in the Evaluation of Results section below.
If the contents of the test wells appear transparent or are a pale-green color, they are placed on a rotary shaker at approximately 125 rpm and are irradiated for two hours with a light intensity of about 600 μΕ m‘2 sec'1 before being extracted.
Evaluation of Results
An aqueous, 10% sodium dodecyl sulfate solution (250 μΐ.) and methanol (1 mL) is added to each test well and is mixed thoroughly. The mixtures are allowed to stand in the dark for three to four hours. The tissue culture plates are centrifuged at room temperature at low speed (ca. 2000 rpm) for five minutes. The supernatants are removed and analyzed in a Beckman
Model 35 spectrophotometer between 350 nm and 500 nm for the presence of protophorphrin IX, at 668 nm which is the absorption peak of chlorophyll in this solvent system, and at 720 nm to use as a turbidity background reading.
Analysis of Data
For each well a greenness value is obtained by subtracting the 720 nm reading from the 668 nm reading.
These values are averaged for each concentration of the compound to be tested and for the control. The percent inhibition is
Average greenness value for the particular concentration 100 x (1 - _ )
Average greenness value for the control
Claims (35)
1. Use of a compound which is a specific inhibitor of the enzymatic conversion of 5 protoporphyrinogen to heme in mammalian cells for the manufacture of a medicament for treating polycythemia vera.
2. Use according to claim 1 characterized in that said compound is not a tetrapyrrole and said compound has a redox potential more negative than -500 mV. 10
3. Use according to claim 1 characterized in that said compound has an 150 for protoporphyrinogen oxidase of less than 10 μΜ.
4. Use according to claim 3 characterized in that said I50 is less than ΙμΜ. 15
5. Use according to claim 1 characterized in that said compound is a nitrodiphenyl ether herbicide.
6. Use according to claim 5 characterized in that said nitrodiphenyl ether has a carboxylic acid ester substituent. 20
7. Use according to claim 6 characterized in that said substituent is a lower alkoxycarbonyl-lower alkoxycarbonyl substituent.
8. Use according to claim 5 characterized in that said nitrodiphenyl ether has a lower alkoxy 25 substituent.
9. Use according to claim 1 characterized in that said compound has the formula Ph-NHet where Ph·’ is a substituted phenyl and NHet is a 5- or 6-membered heterocyclic ring having one to four ring-nitrogen 30 atoms and having the formula -N-C=O or -N-C-OH or -N-C-Cl 9 ' \ n Q Q—C—R Q—C—R - 32 where Q represents the balance of the heterocyclic ring and R reoresents hydrogen or a substituent group.
10. Use according to claim 1 characterized in that said compound has the formula where Ph is substituted phenyl.
11. Use according to claim 1 characterized in that said compound has the formula II s where Ph is substituted phenyl.
12. use according to claim 9 characterized in that Ph is phenyl having a substituent of the formula \ N-SO 2 -R / where R is lower alkyl.
13. use according to claim 9 characterized in that Ph is phenyl having a substituent which includes a terminal 1-(lower alkoxycarbonyl) ethoxy group.
14. Use according to claim 9 characterized in that said substituent is a [1-(lower alkoxycarbonyl) ethoxy ]phenoxy substituent.
15. Use of a compound which is a specific inhibitor of the enzymatic conversion of protoporphyrinogen to heme in mammalian 35 cells for the manufacture of a medicament for treating neonatal hyperbilirubinaemia, or preventing its occurrence in infants susceptible thereto.
IE 911971' - 33 16. Use according to claim 15 characterized in that said compound is not a tetrapyrrole and said compound has a redox potential, more negative than -500 mV.
17. Use according to claim 15 characterized in that 5. Said compound has an I50 for protoporphyrinogen oxidase of less than 10 uM.
18. Use according to claim 17 characterized in that said I50 is less than lpM.
19. Use according to claim 15 characterized in that 10 said comDound is a nitrodiphenyl ether herbicide.
20. Use according to claim 19 characterized in that said nitrodiphenyl ether has a carboxylic acid ester substituent.
21. Use according to claim 20 characterized in that 15 said substituent is a lower alkoxycarbonyl-lower alkoxycarbonyl substituent.
22. use according to claim 19 characterized in that said nitrodiphenyl ether has a lower alkoxy substituent. 20
23. Use according to claim 15 characterized in that said compound has the formula Ph-NHet where Ph is a substituted phenyl and NHet is a 5- or 6-membered heterocyclic ring having one to four ring-nitrogen atoms and having the formula -N-C=O or -N-C-OH or -N-C-Cl ') 4 ι \\ Q Q—C—R Q—C—R 30 where Q represents the balance of the heterocyclic ring and R represents hydrogen or a substituent group.
24. Use according to claim 15 characterized in that said compound has the formula where Ph is substituted phenyl.
25. use according to claim 15 characterized in that said compound has the formula n s where Ph is substituted phenyl.
26. Use according to claim 23 characterized in that Ph is phenyl having a substituent of the formula \ n-so 2 -r / where R is lower alkyl.
27. use according to claim 23 characterized in that Ph is phenyl having a substituent which includes a terminal 1-(lower alkoxycarbonyl)ethoxy group.
28. use according to claim 23 characterized in that said substituent is a [1-(lower alkoxycarbonyl) ethoxy] phenoxy substituent.
29. Use according to claim 1 characterized in that said compound is an aryl triazolinone.
30. use according to claim 29 characterized in that said compound is 1-[2,4-dichloro-5-(N-methylsulfonylamino) phenyl] -3-methyl-4-dif luoromethyl-a 2 -l, 2,4triazolin-5-one.
31. use according to claim 12 characterized in that NHet is a triazolinone ring. - 35
32. Use according to claim 15 characterized in that said compound is an aryl triazolinone.
33. Use according to claim 32 characterized in that said compound is l-[2,4-dichloro-5-(N-methylsulfonyl 5 amino)phenyl]-3-methyl-4-difluoromethyl-a 2 -l,2,4triazolin-5-one.
34. Use according to claim 32 characterized in that NHet is a triazolinone ring. θ
35. Use according to claim 1 or 15, substantially as hereinbefore described. Dated F. R. this the 10th day of KELLY & CO. June, 1991 BY:L\ k. **““___ ^-—EXECUTIVE 27 Dublin 4 AGENT! 5 FOR Ttlg^APPLICANTS
Applications Claiming Priority (1)
Application Number | Priority Date | Filing Date | Title |
---|---|---|---|
US53579490A | 1990-06-11 | 1990-06-11 |
Publications (1)
Publication Number | Publication Date |
---|---|
IE911971A1 true IE911971A1 (en) | 1991-12-18 |
Family
ID=24135791
Family Applications (1)
Application Number | Title | Priority Date | Filing Date |
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IE197191A IE911971A1 (en) | 1990-06-11 | 1991-06-10 | Treatment of disease |
Country Status (7)
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AU (1) | AU8185491A (en) |
CS (1) | CS176291A3 (en) |
IE (1) | IE911971A1 (en) |
IL (1) | IL98405A0 (en) |
PT (1) | PT97937A (en) |
WO (1) | WO1991019418A1 (en) |
ZA (1) | ZA914435B (en) |
Families Citing this family (7)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
TW492975B (en) * | 1993-07-26 | 2002-07-01 | Novartis Ag | Tryptase inhibitor |
US6023012A (en) * | 1996-02-28 | 2000-02-08 | Novartis Finance Corporation | DNA molecules encoding plant protoporphyrinogen oxidase |
US5767373A (en) | 1994-06-16 | 1998-06-16 | Novartis Finance Corporation | Manipulation of protoporphyrinogen oxidase enzyme activity in eukaryotic organisms |
US5939602A (en) * | 1995-06-06 | 1999-08-17 | Novartis Finance Corporation | DNA molecules encoding plant protoporphyrinogen oxidase and inhibitor-resistant mutants thereof |
US6084155A (en) | 1995-06-06 | 2000-07-04 | Novartis Ag | Herbicide-tolerant protoporphyrinogen oxidase ("protox") genes |
EP0883682A1 (en) * | 1996-02-28 | 1998-12-16 | Novartis AG | Dna molecules encoding plant protoporphyrinogen oxidase and inhibitor-resistant mutants thereof |
CN103694243B (en) * | 2013-12-20 | 2015-09-09 | 中国农业大学 | 2-Substituted pyridyl-1,2,4-triazolo[1,2-a]pyridazine compounds |
Family Cites Families (5)
Publication number | Priority date | Publication date | Assignee | Title |
---|---|---|---|---|
HU190371B (en) * | 1980-12-18 | 1986-08-28 | The Wellcome Foundation Ltd,Gb | Process for producing ether-type compounds and pharmaceutical compositions containing them as active agents |
CA1192545A (en) * | 1982-02-16 | 1985-08-27 | Glaxo Group Limited | Heterocyclic derivatives as histamine h.sub.2- antagonists |
US5025029A (en) * | 1986-10-10 | 1991-06-18 | Children's Hospital Medical Center Of Northern California | Method for augmenting fetal hemoglobin |
US4820722A (en) * | 1987-08-14 | 1989-04-11 | Eli Lilly And Company | Disubstituted tetrazoles and their use as leukotriene antagonists |
US4847276A (en) * | 1988-09-06 | 1989-07-11 | Merrell Dow Pharmaceuticals Inc. | Treatment of thromobocytosis with 5-(4-chlorophenyl)-2,4-diemthyl-3H-1,2,4-triazole-3-thione |
-
1991
- 1991-06-06 IL IL98405A patent/IL98405A0/en unknown
- 1991-06-10 ZA ZA914435A patent/ZA914435B/en unknown
- 1991-06-10 WO PCT/US1991/004087 patent/WO1991019418A1/en unknown
- 1991-06-10 CS CS911762A patent/CS176291A3/en unknown
- 1991-06-10 IE IE197191A patent/IE911971A1/en unknown
- 1991-06-10 AU AU81854/91A patent/AU8185491A/en not_active Abandoned
- 1991-06-11 PT PT97937A patent/PT97937A/en not_active Application Discontinuation
Also Published As
Publication number | Publication date |
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IL98405A0 (en) | 1992-07-15 |
CS176291A3 (en) | 1992-08-12 |
PT97937A (en) | 1992-04-30 |
WO1991019418A1 (en) | 1991-12-26 |
ZA914435B (en) | 1992-03-25 |
AU8185491A (en) | 1992-01-07 |
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