Monohalocephalomannines having anticancer and antileukemic activity and method of preparation therefor

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 6177456
  • Patent Number
    6,177,456
  • Date Filed
    Friday, July 10, 1998
    26 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, January 23, 2001
    24 years ago
Abstract
The present invention provides a 3″-monohalocephalomannine of the formula: wherein R is halogen.
Description




FIELD OF THE INVENTION




The present invention is directed to novel monohalogenated cephalomannine derivatives, their preparation and methods of use as effective anticancer and antileukemic agents, and as alternatives to paclitaxel for use in bioactivity testing.




BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION




Several important compounds from the taxane family of diterpenes have been identified as possessing strong antineoplastic activity against various cancers. For example, paclitaxel (1), having the following structure,











has been approved by the Food and Drug Administration for the treatment of ovarian and breast cancers and Karposi sarcoma, and is presently undergoing clinical trials for treatment of various other cancers, including lung and colon cancer.




Cephalomannine has been reported to be effective in causing remission of leukemic tumors (see U.S. Pat. No. 4,206,221) and is most often present with its structurally similar analog, paclitaxel. The structure of cephalomannine (2) is shown below:











Paclitaxel and cephalomannine are only some of the many natural products from the taxane family which can be found, for example, in the bark of the Pacific yew tree


Taxus brevifolia


and other yew species such as


T. baccata, T. cuspidata


, as well as


T. yvunnanensis


and other plant materials including


T. hicksii, T. densiforinis, T. gem, T. wardii, T. capitata, T. brownii


, and


T. dark green spreader


. These compounds can also be found in Cephalotaxus species, such as, for example,


Cephalotaxus manni


as well as cultured plant cells and fungi.




The supply of paclitaxel, cephalomannine and other important taxanes is, however, limited to a finite amount of yew trees and other vegetation in which they are present in small amounts. Thus, alternative compounds having paclitaxel-like or cephalomannine-like anti-tumor and/or anti-leukemic activity are highly desirable to increase the armamentarium of clinical therapeutic agents.




In U.S. application Ser. No. 08/654,424, filed May 29, 1996, and U.S. application Ser. No. 08/672,397, filed May 29, 1996, now U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,807,888 and 5,854,278 respectively, the entirety of each being incorporated by reference herein, the synthesis, separation and anticancer activity of several dihalocephalomannine diasteromers is provided. In this study, two diastereomeric 2″,3″-dibromocephalomannines and their two corresponding 7-epimers were obtained by treatment of extracts of


Taxus yunnanensis


with bromine solution, under mild conditions. Treatment of the same extract with chlorine solution yielded four diasteromeric 2″,3″-chlorocephalomannines. The diasteromeric mixtures were separated into the individual components by preparative HPLC on C


18


reversed-phase silica gel. A more efficient analytical separation was obtained on a pentafluorophenyl bonded phase. The compounds were isolated and fully identified by classic and modern methods. Slight differences were observed in the NMR spectra of the 7-epimers when compared to their 7β-OH analogs. On the basis of a comparison of physicochemical data, the bromo compounds were identified as (2″R,3″S)-dibromo-7-epi-cephalomannine (3), (2″S,3″R)-dibromo-7-epicephalomannine (4),(2″R,3″S)-dibromocephalomannine (5), (2″S,3″R)-dibromocephalomannine (6). The chloro compounds were identified as (2″R,3″R)-dichlorocephalomannine (7), (2″S,3″S)-dichlorocephalomannine (8), (2″R,3″S)-dichlorocephalomannine (9), and (2″S,3″R)-dichlorocephalomannine (10).




Cytotoxic activity was tested against the NCI 60 human tumor cell line panel in comparison with paclitaxel and results were obtained showing strong antineoplastic activity against several tumor lines, including, but not limited to, leukemia cell line HL-60 (TB); Non-Small Cell Cancer Line NCI-H522; Colon Cancer Cell Lines COO 205 and HT29; CNS Cancer Cell Lines SF-539 and SNB-75; Ovarian Cancer Cell Line OVCAR-3; Renal Cancer Cell Line RXF-393; and Breast Cancer Cell Lines MCF7, MDA-MB-231/ATCC, HS 578, MDA-MB-435 and MDA-N.




The structures of some of these dihalogenated cephalomannines are set forth below:













































R




R


1






R


2






















3
















H




OH















4
















H




OH















5
















OH




H















6
















OH




H















7
















OH




H















8
















OH




H















9
















OH




H















10
















OH




H















It would be highly desirable to provide additional new analogs of paclitaxel and cephalomannine having anti-neoplastic and/or anti-leukemic activity to add to the arsenal of bioactive and therapeutic compounds described above.




SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION




As discussed above, individual diastereomeric 2″3″-dichlorocephalomannine analogs have been isolated from extract of


Taxus yunnanensis


after chlorination of the extract. In accordance with the present invention, a more polar and more soluble monohalocephalomannine analog, 3″-monochlorocephalomannine, was discovered during separation and purification, which compound has the following structure:











Cytotoxic activity testing of the inventive analog against the NCI 60 human cell line panel in comparison with paclitaxel demonstrates strong anti-neoplastic and anti-leukemic efficacy of the novel compound.




The invention is more fully discussed in the following detailed description with preferred embodiments with accompanying Figures.











BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS





FIG. 1

illustrates a comparative TLC analysis of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine and paclitaxel.





FIG. 2

is a HPLC chromatogram of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine, paclitaxel and dichlorocephalomannines.





FIG. 3

are HPLC chromatograms of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine.





FIG. 4

is a IR spectrum of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine.





FIG. 5

is a


1


H-NMR spectrum of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine.





FIG. 6

is a UV spectrum of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine.





FIG. 7

is a EI-MS spectrum of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine.





FIG. 8

is a FAB





-MS spectrum of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine.





FIG. 9

is a FAB—MS spectrum of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine.











DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION WITH PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS




The present invention provides a novel compound of the, formula,











which has been fully identified by classical and modern physicochemical methods as 13∝-/N/-(E)-3″-chloro-2″-methylenebutenoyl-3′-phenyl-isosryl/oxy 2∝-benzoyl-4∝,10β-diacetyloxy-1β, 7β-dihydroxy-5β, 20β-epoxy-tax-11-ene-9-One, or named shortly 3″-chlorocephalomannine (I).




Based on the structural differences between paclitaxel and cephalomannine, it has now been found that the side-chain double bond in cephalomannine can be selectively monohalogenated, and as shown in the exemplified specifically prepared embodiments, monochlorinated. In general terms, in illustrating the production of monochlorocephalomannine, the procedure can be conducted as follows.




EXAMPLE 1




To a dry fraction of an extract of


Taxus brevifolia


bark containing about 20% cephalomannine (as determined by HPLC), dissolved in 1,2-dichloroethane and cooled in a ice bath to about 0° C. is added dropwise a solution of chlorine in 1,2-dichloroethane, while stirring the mixture at the same temperature for approximately 3 hours. After the reaction is finished by checking for cephalomannine by following its disappearance in analytic C


18


reversed phase HPLC, the reaction is quenched with ice water. The 1,2-dichloroethane layer is washed by 1% sodium bisulfite and water to neutralize the reaction. After drying on sodium sulfate overnight and filtration, the solution is concentrated to a dry substance on a Buchi rotavapor under high vacuum.




The dry material, after several crystallizations, gives pure paclitaxel with chlorinated compounds remaining in the mother liquor. In addition to four dichlorocephalomannines, as discussed above, a more polar compound was also isolated.




Using running preparative HPLC of the combined mother liquors several times on a C


18


reversed phase column, a monochlorocephalomannine derivative was isolated.




After recrystallization with acetone/hexane (50:50) an amorphous white powder substance was obtained with M.P.=164-165° C.; UV(CH


3


OH); λ max=221.3nm; (ε-18416.2); which proved to be 3″-monochlorocephalomannine of the present invention.





FIG. 1

shows a comparison of TLC analysis of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine with pure paclitaxel, and with 3″-monochlorocephalomannine having R


F


=0.21 and paclitaxel R


F


=0.19.




TLC materials and conditions employed are as follows:




Silica gel 60 F


254


plate (Merck #5554)




Solvent system: hexane—CHCl


3


-EtOAc-MeOH (20:60:15:5)




Spray reagent: 0.1% vanillin in 50:50 H


2


SO


4


-MeOH





FIG. 2

is a HPLC chromatogram of a chlorinated extract of


Taxus yunnanensis


bark. This analysis was performed under the following conditions:




Column: ES Industries (FSP-H5); 5 μm; 60 Å; 4.6×250 mm




Solvent system: CH


3


CN—MeOH—H


2


O (39:20:41)




Flow rate: 0.5 ml/min., isocratic




Detector: Waters 990 photodiode array detector




Injection volume: 50 μl




Wavelength: 227 nm




Run time: 80 min.




The results are as follows:




Peak 1: paclitaxel




RT


1


=26.5 min.




Peak 2: 3″-monochlorocephalomannine




RT


2


=29.8 min.




Peaks 3-6: 2″,3″-dichlorocephalomannines




RT


3


=44.7 min.




RT


4


=47.5 min.




RT


5


=56.2 min.




RT


6


=57.9 min.





FIG. 3

is a HPLC chromatogram of 3″-chlorocephalomannine (Lot# XC-RN29-43-51) performed under the following conditions:




Column: ES Industries (FSP-H5); 5 μm; 60 Å, 4.6-250 mm




Solvent system: MeOH—CH


3


CN—H


2


O (20:35:45)




Flow rate: 1.5 ml/min., isocratic




Detector: Waters 990 photodiode array detector




Injection volume: 50 μl




Wavelength: 227 nm




Run time: 30 min.





FIG. 4

is a IR spectrum of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine with the following analysis:




IR (KBr):(Bands are given in cm


−1


).




As indicated, IR spectrum show bands for tertiary and secondary hydroxyl groups (3500, 1110, 1070 cm


−1


), amide group acylated by aliphatic acid amine (3420, 1670, 1580 cm


−1


), monosubstituted aromatic rings (3070, 1610, 1505, 770, 710 cm


−1


), methyl, methylene and methene group in aliphatic or cyclic compounds, (2960, 2915, 2850, 1450, 1370 cm


−1


), double bonds (3020, 1625, 1430, 1310, 980, 905 where 1425 and 905 cm


−1


show specific











type), esters of aromatic acids (1725, 1270 cm


−2


), saturated cyclic six or larger membered carbonyl ring (1715, 1240 cm


−1


),esters of acetic acid (1730, 1180 cm


−1


), four membered oxetane ring (855 cm


−1


), and monochlorinated chain (765 cm


−1


).





FIG. 5

is a


1


H-NMR spectrum of the inventive 3″-monochlorocephalomannine in CDCl


3


at 300 MHz, which is summarized below in Table 1.












TABLE 1













1


H-NMR (CDCl


3


, BRUKER, 300 MHz)















CHEMICAL








PROTONS




SHIFT (PPM)




PROTONS




CHEMICAL SHIFT (PPM)









H-2




5.68(d,7.3)




H-3′




5.69 (overlap)






H-3




3.80(d,7.2)




2H-o-Ph1




8.13(dd,7.1,1.5)






H-5




4.95(d,8.1)




2H-m-Ph1




7.50,(t,7.3)






H-6a




2.55(m)




H-p-Ph1




7.61(5,7.3)






H-6b




1.90(m)




2H-o-Ph2




7.42(m)






H-7




4.41(m)




2H-m-Ph2




7.42(m)






H-10




6.28 (S)




H-p-Ph2




7.37(m)






H-13




6.25(brs,8.9)




H-3″




4.95(overlap)






H-14a




2.31(m)




3H-4″




1.62(d,6.8)






H-14b




2.31(m)




H-5″a




5.73(s)






3H-16




1.15(s)




H-5″b




5.62(s)






3H-17




1.26(s)




H-1 OH




1.7(s)






3H-18




1.82(s)




H-7 OH




2.45(d,4.1)






3H-19




1.69(s)




H-2′OH




3.39(d,4.6)






H-20a




4.31(ABd,8.5)




H-3′NH




6.85(d,9.2)






H-20b




4.21(ABd,8.1)




3H-4-0Ac




2.39(s)






H-2′




4.73(d,2.5)




3H-10-0Ac




2.25(s)














As shown in Table 1, there is depicted a spectrum which is typical for taxane structures with two singlets at 5.73 and 5.62 ppm for two protons from a >C═CH


2


group in the side chain.





FIG. 6

is a UV spectrum of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine in MeOH, with,




λ


max


=221.3 nm




ε=13416.2





FIGS. 7

,


8


and


9


show EIMS, FAB


+


-MS and FAB





—MS spectra of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine, the results of which are summarized below.




I-MS(FIG. 7): [M]


+


865; m/z 568[T]


+


;m/z 550 [T—H—H


2


O]+; m/z 540; m/z 526 {T—Ac]


+


;m/z 508[T—H—AcOH]


+


; m/z 490[T—AcOH—H


2


O]


+


;m/z 480[T—AcOH—CO]


+


;m/z 468[T—AcOH—Ac]


+


; m/z 448 [T-2AcOH]


+


; 446[T—BzOH]+; m/z 430[—2AcOH—H


2


O]+; m/z 404 [T—BzOH—Ac]


+


; m/z 386[T—BzOH—AcOH]+;m/z 368[T—BzOH—AcOH—H


2


O]+; m/z 343 [T—BzOH—AcOH—Ac—2H]


+


;m/z 326 [T—BzOH—2AcOH]


+


; m/z 308 [T—BzOH—2AcOH—H


2


O]


+


; m/z 298 [SH]


+


; m/z 254 [SH—O—HCOH]


+


m/z 222 [SH—O—CO—HCOH—2H]


+


; m/z 149; m/z 122 [BzOH]


+


; m/z 117 [C


6


H


6


ClCO]


+


; m/z 105[Bz]


+


; m/z 91[C


7


H


7


]+; m/z 77 [C


6


H


6


]+; m/z 60 [AcOH]


+


m/z 43 [Ac];




The FAB


+


-MS spectrum (

FIG. 8

) shows: [M+H]


+


=866; [M+Na]


+


=888;m/z 830[M—H


2


O]


+


;m/z 06[M—AcOH]


+


; m/z 788[M—AcOH—H


2


]


+


; m/z 788[M—AcOH—2H


2


O]m/z 762{MH—Bz+H]


+


;m/z 750 [MH—C


4


H


6


ClCO+H]


+


m/z 744 [MH—BzOH]


+


; m/z 708 [MH—BzOH—2H


2


O]


+


m/z 691[M—BzOH—3H


2


O]


+


;m/z 685 [MH—BzOH—Ac—H


2


O]


+


;m/z 673[M—C


4


H


7


ClCON—AcOH]


+


;m/z 666 [MH—BzOH—AcOH—H


2


O]


+


;m/z 655 [M—C


4


H


7


ClCON—AcOH—H


2


O]


+


;m/z 643[MH—Bz—AcOH]


+


;m/z 626 [M—C


7


H


6


ClCO—BzOH]


+


;m/z 609 [MH—C


4


H


6


ClCO—BzOH—H


2


O]


+


;m/z 591 [M—C


4


H


6


ClCO—AcOH—2H


2


O]


+


; m/z 569[T]


+


; m/z 551 [T-H2O]


+


; m/z 531 [T—2H


2


O—2H]


+


;m/z 509 [T—AcOH]


+


;m/z 49 [T—AcOH—H


2


O]


+


;m/z 474[T—C


6


H


5


—H


2


O]


+


;m/z 449 [T—2AcOH]


+


;m/z 447 [T—BzOH]


+


; m/z 438 [T—C


6


H


5


—3H


2


O]


+


; m/z 416 [T—H—HCOH]


+


;m/z 406 [T—BzOH—Ac]


+


;m/z 387 [T—BzOH—AcOH]


+


;m/z 370 [TH—BzOH—AcOH—H2O]


+


;m/z 345 [T—BzOH—AcOH—Ac]


+


;m/z 327 [T—BzOH—2AcOH]


+


;m/z 309 [T—BzOH—2AcOH—H


2


O]


+


;m/z 298 [MH—T]


+


;or [SH]


+


;m/z 280[SH—H


2


O]


+


;m/z 264 [SH—O—H


2


O]


+


; m/z 252 [SH—CO—H


2


O]


+


;m/z 218 [SH—O—CO—2H


2


O]


+


;m/z 177 m/z 149; m/z 133[C


4


H


6


ClCONH]


+


;m/z 119/21 [BzOH]


+


;m/z 105 [Bz]


+


;m/z 91[C


7


H


7


]


+


;m/z 85; m/z 77 [C


6


H


6


]


+


;m/z 51[C


4


H


3


]


+


m/z 43 [Ac]


+


;





FIG. 9

is a FAB





—MS spectrum of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine which shows [M-H]





at m/z 864 amu.




The elemental composition and molecular weight on the basis of R-FAB


+


were found as follows:

















C


45


H


53


NO


14






35




Cl [M + H]


+


:














Calculated




866.315459







Found




866.315500(Δ m = 0.0 ppm).











C


45


H


53


NO


14






37




Cl [M + H]


+


:














Calculated




868.312509







Found




868.324300(Δ m = −13.6 ppm).











C


45


H


52


NO


14


ClNa [M + Na]


+


:














Calculated




888.297403







Found




888.300900(Δ m = −3.9 ppm)











C


45


H


52


NO


14


ClK [M + K]


±


:














Calculated




904.271342







Found




904.285300(Δ m = 15.4 ppm).















In accordance with the present invention, it is possible to halogenate, for example, chlorinate, the exocyclic side chain double bond on the taxane structure as shown in the above-described illustrative examples of a preferred embodiment, without other undesirable halogenation of the double bond in the taxane ring due to stearic hindrance, to provide through dehydrohalogenation of dihalocephalomannine a monohalo(chloro) derivative. It is thought that three isomers (A), (B) and (C) of unsaturated monochloro derivatives as shown below are possible.











Without desiring to limit this invention to any particular theory, on the basis of information from classical and modern physicochemical methods for structural investigation of the natural organic compounds as shown above, it is thought that compound (C) in above shown equilibria answers the data most closely.




EXAMPLE 2




In Vitro Studies Showing Antitumor Efficacy of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine




The well-known anti-tumor drug paclitaxel shows highly desirable antitumor efficacy, and acts in a unique way by binding to microtubules to stabilize them from depolymerization, or inducing abnormal polymerization of tubuli, resulting in the disruption of cell mitosis and cancer cell proliferation. The mechanism of action of paclitaxel, pharmacology, etc., is described in detail, for example, in Rowinsky et al., “Taxol: A Novel Investigational Antimicrotubule Agent”, 2


Natl. Cancer Inst.,


82:1247 (1990).




In accordance with the present invention, the novel 3″-monohalocephalomannine compound show strong paclitaxel-like antitumor efficacy, which provides a valuable addition to the arsenal of antitumor therapeutic agents. The following in vitro studies conducted by the National Cancer Institute's Developmental Therapeutics Program demonstrate strong antitumor efficacy of the inventive monohalocephalomannines.




The Developmental Therapeutics Program provides as a service to the public an in vitro anticancer drug discovery screen using a panel of sixty different human tumor cell lines over which candidate drugs are tested at defined ranges of concentrations. See Boyd et al.,


Drug Development Research


34:90-109 (1995), the entirety of which is incorporated herein by reference.




As discussed in Boyd et al., the screen is designed and operated in such a manner that both relative and absolute sensitivities of each of the cell lines comprising the screen are reproducible to the degree that a characteristic profile (“fingerprint”) of a respective cell line's response to a drug candidate can be generated.




Recent studies of the in vivo counterpart of the NCI in vitro screen have indicated the in vitro screen to be an effective selector of compounds with in vivo anticancer efficacy. See Grever et al.,


Proc. Am. Assoc. Cancer Res.


35:369 (1994).




Operation and interpretation of the screen are discussed in detail in Boyd et al., as well as in several other articles cited therein and thus need not be repeated here. In vitro efficacy of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine by dose response is shown in Tables 2 and 3, Testing Results and Mean Graphs, respectively.















TABLE 2













Log10 Concentration




















Time





Mean Optical Densities




Percent Growth





























Panel/Cell Line




Zero




Ctrl




−8.3




−7.3




−6.3




−5.3




−4.3




−8.3




−7.3




−6.3




−5.3




−4.3




GI50




TGI




LC50









Leukemia





















CCRF-CEM




0.279




1.202




1.168




1.171




0.895




0.941




0.758




96




97




67




72




 52




>5.00E − 05 




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






KL-60 (TB)




0.242




1.008




0.973




0.533




0.478




0.462




0.629




95




38




31




29




 51





>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






K-562




0.141




1.261




1.094




1.089




0.538




0.437




0.463




85




85




35




26




 29




2.53E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






MOLT-4




0.567




2.023




1.997




2.326




1.327




0.868




0.661




98




121 




52




21




 6




5.88E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






RPMI-8226




1.074




1.862




1.807




1.449




0.838




0.900




0.738




93




48




−22 




−16 




−31




4.42E − 08




 2.41E − 07




>5.00E − 05






SR




0.468




1.657




1.518




0.920




0.656




0.523




0.421




88




38




16




 5




−10




2.89E − 08




 1.03E − 05




>5.00E − 05






Non-Small Cell






Lung Cancer






A549/ATCC




0.328




1.623




1.613




1.504




0.865




0.514




0.354




99




91




41




14




 2




3.35E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






EKVX




0.315




0.732




0.677




0.658




0.542




0.422




0.396




87




82




54




26




 19




7.10E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






HOP-62




0.433




0.843




0.757




0.759




0.607




0.531




0.440




79




79




42




24




 2




3.12E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






HOP-92




0.312




1.008




0.873




0.881




0.624




0.607




0.394




81




82




45




42




 12




3.62E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E = 05






NCI-H226




0.476




1.001




0.884




0.822




0.555




0.540




0.518




78




66




15




12




 8




1.02E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






NCI-H23




0.546




1.544




1.555




1.399




0.728




0.609




0.409




101 




85




18




 6




−25




1.68E − 07




 7.94E − 06




>5.00E − 05






NCI-H322M




0.405




1.384




1.370




1.326




0.700




0.569




0.395




99




94




30




17




 −2




2.44E − 07




 3.72E − 05




>5.00E − 05






NCI-H522




0.224




0.454




0.464




0.409




0.214




0.114




0.135




105 




80




−5




−49 




−40




1.14E − 07




 4.40E − 07




>5.00E − 05






Colon Cancer






COLO 205




0.329




1.210




1.239




1.109




0.403




0.247




0.090




103 




88




 8




−25 




−73




1.51E − 07




 8.96E − 07




 1.67E − 05






HCC-2998




0.137




0.627




0.611




0.375




0.132




0.051




0.002




97




49




−4




−63 




−98




4.66E − 08




 4.19E − 07




 3.00E − 06






HCT-116




0.163




1.528




1.503




0.701




0.202




0.147




0.045




98




39




 3




−10 




−72




3.30E − 08




 8.40E − 07




 2.19E − 05






HCT-15




0.210




1.533




1.493




1.529




1.305




0.446




0.156




97




100 




83




18




−26




1.60E − 06




 1.28E − 05




>5.00E − 05






HT-29




0.132




0.881




0.797




0.420




0.141




0.096




0.038




89




38




 1




−28 




−71




2.95E − 08




 5.48E − 07




 1.63E − 05






KM12




0.100




0.722




0.595




0.446




0.180




0.139




0.124




79




56




13




 6




 4




6.78E − 08




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






SW-620




0.176




1.064




0.989




0.673




0.192




0.168




0.105




92




56




 2




−5




−41




6.44E − 08




 9.47E − 07




>5.00E − 05






CNS Cancer






SF-268




0.373




1.084




1.011




0.951




0.600




0.420




0.299




90




81




32




 7




−20




2.15E − 07




 8.85E − 06




>5.00E − 05






SF-295




0.415




1.290




1.263




1.208




0.716




0.185




0.144




97




91




34




−55 




−65




2.63E − 07




 1.21E − 06




 4.36E − 06






SF-539




0.491




1.440




1.324




1.214




0.639




0.223




0.169




88




76




16




−55 




−66




1.35E − 07




 8.43E − 07




 4.30E − 06






SNB-19




0.276




0.908




0.848




0.762




0.454




0.330




0.276




90




77




28




 9




 0




1.78E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






SNB-75




0.443




0.820




0.739




0.727




0.590




0.306




0.298




78




75




39




−31 




−33




2.47E − 07




 1.80E − 06




>5.00E − 05






U251




0.293




1.169




1.135




0.976




0.515




0.269




0.202




96




78




25




−8




−31




1.70E − 07




 2.85E − 06




>5.00E − 05






Melanoma






LOX IMVI




0.282




1.700




1.585




1.221




0.574




0.433




0.108




92




66




21




11




−62




1.13E − 07




 7.01E − 06




 3.43E − 05






MALME-3M




0.445




0.783




0.793




0.645




0.508




0.454




0.313




103 




59




18




 3




−30




8.40E − 08




 5.98E − 06




>5.00E − 05






M14




0.276




1.072




1.039




0.942




0.419




0.202




0.069




96




84




18




−27 




−75




1.63E − 07




 1.26E − 06




 1.51E − 05






SK-MEL-2




1.225




1.848




1.800




1.691




1.614




1.255




0.572




92




75




63




 5




−53




8.25E − 07




 6.07E − 06




 4.39E − 05






SK-MEL-5




0.135




1.002




1.055




0.541




0.234




0.320




0.016




106 




47




11




21




−88




4.43E − 08




 7.83E − 06




 2.24E − 05






UACC-257




0.175




0.773




0.664




0.477




0.335




0.295




0.063




82




50




27




20




−64




5.23E − 08




 8.68E − 06




 3.43E − 05






UACC-62




0.473




1.691




1.662




1.296




0.820




0.787




0.201




98




68




28




26




−58




1.41E − 07




 1.02E − 05




 4.06E − 05






Ovarian Cancer






IGRCV1




0.410




1.309




1.245




0.965




0.644




0.500




0.394




93




62




26




10




 −4




1.07E − 07




 2.62E − 05




>5.00E − 05






OVCAR-3




0.529




1.393




1.208




1.117




0.459




0.445




0.268




78




68




−13 




−16 




−49




8.33E − 08




 3.44E − 07




>5.00E − 05






OVCAR-4




0.404




1.650




1.637




1.608




1.320




1.146




0.856




99




96




68




52




 24




5.83E − 06




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






OVCAR-5




0.612




0.971




0.939




0.934




0.702




0.587




0.258




91




90




25




−4




−58




2.06E − 07




 3.62E − 06




 3.57E − 05






OVCAR-8




1.032




1.747




1.738




1.727




1.447




0.734




0.698




99




97




58




−29 




−32




6.19E − 07




 2.33E − 06




>5.00E − 05






SK-CV-3




0.689




1.198




1.145




1.128




0.769




0.562




0.555




90




86




16




−18 




−20




1.63E − 07




 1.44E − 06




>5.00E − 05






Renal Cancer






786-0




0.185




0.955




0.909




0.900




0.475




0.182




0.100




94




93




38




−2




−46




2.98E − 07




 4.48E − 06




>5.00E − 05






ACHN




0.130




0.638




0.554




0.523




0.324




0.308




0.155




83




77




38




35




 5




2.50E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






CAKI-1




0.372




1.053




1.038




1.125




0.921




0.758




0.481




98




111 




80




57




 16




7.26E − 06




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






SN12C




0.236




0.755




0.728




0.736




0.395




0.407




0.272




95




96




31




33




 7




2.53E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






TK-10




0.145




0.654




0.585




0.558




0.397




0.313




0.188




86




81




49




33




 8




4.80E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






UO-31




1.296




2.021




2.018




2.067




1.999




1.265




0.829




100 




106 




97




−2




−36




1.49E − 06




 4.73E − 06




>5.00E − 05






Prostate Cancer






PC-3




0.531




1.953




1.852




1.360




0.830




0.511




0.467




93




94




21




−4




−12




1.99E − 07




 3.50E − 06




>5.00E − 05






DU-145




0.366




1.046




1.067




1.028




0.557




0.310




0.248




103 




97




28




−15 




−32




2.41E − 07




 2.22E − 06




>5.00E − 05






Breast Cancer






MCF7




0.232




1.214




1.149




0.768




0.345




0.327




0.202




93




55




11




10




−13




6.39E − 08




 1.34E − 05




>5.00E − 05






MCF7/ADR-RES




0.757




1.202




1.167




1.217




1.062




0.717




0.263




92




103 




69




−5




−65




8.95E − 07




 4.24E − 06




 2.78E − 05






MDA-MB-231/




0.380




0.774




0.779




0.726




0.580




0.497




0.244




101 




88




51




30




−36




5.43E − 07




 1.42E − 05




>5.00E − 05






ATCC






HS 578T




0.346




0.756




0.637




0.616




0.382




0.268




0.226




71




66




 9




−23 




−35




9.45E − 08




 9.47E − 07




>5.00E − 05






MDA-MB-435




0.321




1.366




1.151




0.361




0.096




0.108




0.155




79




 4




−70 




−67 




−52




1.23E − 08




 5.64E − 08




 2.68E − 07






MDA-N




0.254




1.152




1.066




0.299




0.050




0.070




0.086




90




 5




−90 




−72 




−66




1.49E − 08




 5.72E − 08




 2.21E − 07






BT-549




0.373




0.981




0.907




0.812




0.607




0.439




0.325




88




72




38




11




−13




2.27E − 07




 1.42E − 05




>5.00E − 05






T-470




0.525




1.295




1.311




1.207




0.858




0.833




0.722




102 




89




43




40




 26




3.55E − 07




>5.00E − 05




>5.00E − 05






















TABLE 3





























































Discussion of In Vitro Testing Results




As mentioned above in the NCI in vitro anticancer drug screen, the effect of an antitumor candidate, i.e., 3″-monochlorocephalomannine of the present invention, on a cell line, percentage growth (PG), and calculated response parameters are discussed in Boyd et al., “Data display and analysis strategies for the NCI-disease-oriented in vitro antitumor drug screen,


Cytotoxic Anticancer Drugs: Models and Concepts for Drug Discovery and Development


, Kluwer Academic Publishers, Amsterdam, pp. 11-34 (1992), and Monks et al., “Feasibility of a high-flux anticancer drug screen utilizing a diverse panel of human tumor cell lines in culture”,


J. Natl. Cancer Inst.


83:757-766 (1991), the entire disclosures of which are incorporated herein by reference. In general, in the screening data report, Table 2 and mean graphs, Table 3 “GI


50


” represents the 50% growth inhibition factor, “TGI” represents a total growth inhibition, or cytostatic level of effect, and “LC


50


” represents a lethal concentration, or net cell killing or cytotoxicity parameter. Values accompanied by a “<” signify that the dosage level or real value is a value that is something less than the lowest tested concentration, and values accompanied by a “>” indicate that the effective dosage or real value is a level greater than the highest tested concentration.




The mean graph of Table 3 is obtained from GI


50


, TGI and LC


50


concentrations obtained for compounds tested against each cell line in the NCI in vitro screen. A detailed discussion of mean graph construction is also provided in Boyd et al. (1995). In interpreting the mean graphs in general, a bar projecting to the right represents sensitivity of a particular cell line to an anticancer/antileukemic candidate in excess of the average sensitivity of all tested cell lines, while bars extending to the left represent cell lines which are less sensitive on average to the anticancer/antileukemic candidate. As the bar scales are logarithmic, a bar which extends, for example, 2 or 3 units to the right of the vertical reference line in, say a GI


50


mean graph, indicates that the candidate drug compound achieved a response parameter for a particular cell line at a concentration one-hundredth to one-thousandth of the mean concentration required over all cell lines, therefore indicating that the particular tumor cell line is unusually sensitive to the tested candidate.




As shown by the instant results, the high magnitude of effect of monochlorocephalomannine on several cell lines in which the inventive compounds demonstrate a high response level include, for example, leukemia, non-small cell lung cancer, colon cancer, CNS cancer, melanoma, ovarian cancer, renal cancer, prostate cancer, breast cancer, thereby reproducibly demonstrating the high antitumor efficacy of the inventive compounds.



Claims
  • 1. 3″-monohalocephalomannine of the formula: wherein R is halogen.
  • 2. The compound of claim 1 wherein R is chlorine.
  • 3. The compound of claim 1 wherein R is bromine.
  • 4. The compound of claim 1 wherein R is a halogen selected from iodine and fluorine.
  • 5. A pharmaceutical formulation which comprises as an active ingredient the compound of claims 1, 2, 3 or 4 or a pharmaceutically acceptable salt thereof.
  • 6. A method for treating tumors in animals or humans which comprises administering to an animal or human in need thereof a tumor-sensitive amount of the compound of claims 1, 2, 3 or 4.
  • 7. A method for the production of monohalocephalomannine comprising halogenating cephalomannine under conditions to selectively monohalogenate the side chain portion of cephalomannine to produce 3″-monohalocephalomannine.
  • 8. The method of claim 7 wherein a compound selected from the group consisting of 3″-monochlorocephalomannine, 3″-monobromocephalomannine, 3″-monoiodocephalomonnme, or 3″-monofluorocephalomannine is produced.
  • 9. The method of claims 7 or 8 wherein the cephalomannine is present in any amount in a mixture comprising paclitaxel and other taxane ring-containing compounds.
RELATED APPLICATIONS

This application is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/974,404, filed Nov. 19, 1997, now abandoned which is a continuation of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/936,710, filed Sep. 24, 1997, now abandoned, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/654,424, filed May 29, 1996, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,807,888, and U.S. application Ser. No. 08/672,397, filed May 29, 1996, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,854,278, which are both continuations-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/571,427, filed Dec. 13, 1995, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,840,748, which is a continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/572,240, filed Dec. 13, 1995, now U.S. Pat. No. 5,654,448, which is continuation-in-part of U.S. application Ser. No. 08/530,846, filed Oct. 2, 1995, now abandoned.

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4960790 Stella et al. Oct 1990
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5019504 Christen et al. May 1991
5059699 Kingston et al. Oct 1991
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5157049 Haugwitz et al. Oct 1992
5175315 Holton Dec 1992
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5229526 Holton Jul 1993
5243045 Holton et al. Sep 1993
5248796 Chen et al. Sep 1993
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5254580 Chen et al. Oct 1993
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5272171 Ueda et al. Dec 1993
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Entry
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Continuations (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 08/936710 Sep 1997 US
Child 08/974404 US
Continuation in Parts (6)
Number Date Country
Parent 08/974404 Nov 1997 US
Child 09/113462 US
Parent 08/654424 May 1996 US
Child 08/936710 US
Parent 08/672397 May 1996 US
Child 08/654424 US
Parent 08/571427 Dec 1995 US
Child 08/672397 US
Parent 08/572240 Dec 1995 US
Child 08/571427 US
Parent 08/530846 Oct 1995 US
Child 08/572240 US