Pro-prodrugs, their production and use

Abstract
Substrate-spacer-prodrug compounds (pro-prodrugs) suited for site specific delivery of drugs, a process of preparing them and their use are described.
Description

The invention refers to the field of substrate-spacer-prodrug compounds (pro-prodrugs) suited for site specific delivery of drugs, a process of preparing them and their use.
A prodrug may be defined as a chemical which is non-toxic and pharmacodynamically inert, but which can be transformed in vivo to a pharmacologically active drug.
Prodrug transformation can be obtained in vivo using site specifically located enzymes (WO 92/19639), systemically available enzymes (Etoposide phosphate, Ref.: 10th International Congress of Chemotherapy, Jun. 27-Jul. 2, 1993, Abstract Nr. 692), endogenous intracelluar lysosomal proteolytic enzymes (Duncan R., Anti-Cancer Drugs 3, 175-210, 1992) or sequential action of two endogenous "tumor site specific" enzymes (WO 93/08688). This enzyme mediated transformation is most effective with respect to pharmacological efficacy, --if the prodrug is highly detoxified compared to the drug--, can be selectively activated at the target site, and has an extended plasma half-life. Detoxification is optimally obtained, if the hydrophilicity of the prodrug is significantly higher than that of the drug combined with a suitable plasma stability of the prodrug. Prodrug transformation is optimally obtained, if the prodrug can be target site specifically cleaved with high activation rate (Vmax/Km). In addition, plasma half life of prodrugs can be extended by linking to hydrophilic high molecular weight copolymers (Duncan, R., Anti-Cancer Drugs 3, 175-210, 1992).
The prodrugs reported in the literature do not fulfill the criteria for optimal site specific prodrug activation.
Now, new pro-prodrugs with exceptional pharmacological efficacy could be synthesized harbouring all the favourable parameters mentioned above. These pro-prodrugs need activation by at least two different enzymes, one of them located accessible only at the target site, the other one located systemically or in a different compartement/site.
One of the enzymes can be an endogenous enzyme located in the plasma (i.e. esterases, preferentially phosphatases, etc.), the second enzyme could be an endogenous intracellular, preferentially a lysosomal enzyme (i.e. proteases, glycosidases, preferentially glucuronidases, etc.) accessible only at the target site or a targeted enzyme. Targeting preferentially can be obtained using an appropriate fusion protein (EP-A 0501215) or an antibody-enzyme conjugate (WO 88/07378).
Furthermore, pro-prodrug activation can be performed by independent or sequential action of the two enzymes. Independent action means that the pro-prodrugs are substrates for both enzymes; sequential action means that the pro-prodrugs are only substrates for one enzyme and after conversion to prodrugs are substrates for the second enzyme. An independent action of both enzymes is preferable for the efficient release of the drug at the target site. Especially, the combined activity of locally accessible endogenous lysosomal or targeted glycosidases and systemically available esterases/phosphatases results in very efficient target site specific activation.
The pro-prodrugs according to the invention consist of the following common building blocks:
(prodrug).sub.x -S I
wherein S means a substrate moiety to which one or more (x=1 or an integer) prodrug moieties can be bound and wherein the prodrug-S bond or bonds can be cleaved by one enzyme and where for optimal cleavage S can be linked to the prodrug moiety by a spacer which can be self-immolative, whereby a self-immolative spacer is defined as a moiety which is bound through two bonds to two molecules and which eliminates itself from the second molecule if the bond to the first molecule is cleaved and wherein
prodrug means a moiety which can be cleaved by another enzyme to generate a pharmacologically active substance and
wherein the activating enzymes are at least two different human enzymes one of these located accessible only at the target site of the body.
Preferred S moieties are hydrophilic moieties such as mono- or oligo-phosphate, sulfate, dicarboxylate or polymeric moieties such as polyglutamate, polysialic acid, polyethylen glycol or N-(2-hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide copolymers and preferred prodrugs are compounds of formula II:
glycosyl-spacer-drug II
wherein
glycosyl means a mono-, oligo- or polysaccharid or derivative thereof spacer means a moiety as described above and drug means a pharmacologically active substance.
Especially preferred are compounds according to formula III ##STR1## wherein one of R.sub.1,2,3,4,5,7,8 may be mono- or oligophosphate, sulfate, an acyl moiety such as --OCO(CH.sub.2).sub.o --COOH where o is 0 to 100, preferentially 0 to 30, a polymeric residue ##STR2## where p and r are 0 to 100, preferentially 1 to 30, a polyglutamat where p is 0 to 100, preferentially 1 to 30,
a phosphodiester ##STR3## where p and r are 0 to 100, preferentially 1-30 or a phosphodiester substituted with polyethylene glycol or with polysialic acid
and the other R's are independently of each other H or OH,
wherein R.sub.6 may be an electron withdrawing residue, preferentially a nitro-, fluoro- or chloro-residue,
wherein n is 0 or 1,
wherein X is O, NH or S,
wherein Y may be COOH, PO.sub.3 H.sub.2, --CH.sub.2 --COOH, --CH.sub.2 --PO.sub.3 H.sub.2, CHOH--COOH or CHOH--PO.sub.3 H.sub.2,
wherein m is 0 or 1.
Preferred are compounds, which need activation by at least two different enzymes, one of them located accessible only at the target site, the other one located systemically or in a different compartement/site, compounds, wherein the activating enzymes are hydrolases, e.g. esterases, preferentially phosphatases, combined with glycosidases, preferentially .beta.-glucuronidases.
Enzyme in this application may also mean catalytic antibody.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are depicted in the following. If not described, the compounds can be prepared by prior art methods, for example by activation of the 14-C position of N-�3-nitro-4-(methyl (.beta.-D-glucopyranosyl) uronat)-benzyloxycarbonyl! daunorubicin (described as compound 64b in WO 92/19639) by halogenation according to F. Arcamone (German Patent P 1917874) and further reaction of this intermediate with the desired ligand for example a mono- or dibasic carboxylic acid as described by M. Israel (J. Med. Chem., 1986, 29, 1273-1276). Hydrolysis of the methyl (.beta.-D-glucopyranosyl) uronat moiety to yield the free glucopyranosyluronat can be done according to WO 92/19639 either before or after coupling of the desired ligand.
14-O-Sulfate can be prepared analogously to the phosphate.
Derivatives of N-(4-.beta.-glucuronyl-3-nitrobenzyloxycarbonyl)-doxorubicin-14-O-phosphate, substituted at the phosphate moiety, can be obtained according to J.-B. Ducep (German Patent P 2943438) by reaction of a N-�3-nitro-4-(methyl (.beta.-D-glucopyranosyl) uronat)-benzyloxycarbonyl! daunorubicin-14-halide with the corresponding substituted phosphate. Substances modified at the glucuronic acid or the sugar moiety of the anthracyclin can be obtained by the synthesis according to WO 92/19639, starting with the desired modified glucuronic acid moiety or the sugar modified anthracycline with appropriate blocking groups if necessary.
The citations on this page are herewith incorporated by reference.





EXAMPLE 1
N-(4-.beta.-glucuronyl-3-nitrobenzyloxycarbonyl)-doxorubicin- 14-O-phosphate ##STR4##
To a solution of N-�3-nitro-4-(methyl (.beta.-D-glucopyranosyl) uronat)-benzyloxycarbonyl! doxorubicin (described as compound 70b in WO 92/19639) (100 mg, 0.11 mmol) in dry acetonitrile (5 ml) was added 1.1 eq. of phosphoryl chlorid (10 .mu.l in 1 ml of acetonitril), in presence of 4 eq. of N,N'-diisopropylethylamine (76 .mu.l in 1 ml of MeCN). The reaction mixture was stirred overnight, and then evaporated (T<40.degree. C.) under reduced pressure to give a syrup. The later was dissolved in a mixture of THF (5 ml) and H.sub.2 O (3 ml) and cooled at 0.degree. C. then, a 2N aqueous solution of NaOH was added (6 eq., 0.3 ml) and the reaction mixture stirred for 3 hrs. The mixture was carefully acidified until pH=8 before evaporation to dryness. The crude final product was purified on a C18 silicagel column. The later was washed with H.sub.2 O and the product was eluted with aq. MeCN.
Example 2 ##STR5##
Example 3 ##STR6##
Example 4 ##STR7##
Example 5 ##STR8##
Example 6 ##STR9##
Example 7 ##STR10##
Example 8 ##STR11##
Example 9 ##STR12##
Example 10 ##STR13##
Example 11 ##STR14##
Example 12 ##STR15##
The pro-prodrugs defined in example 1-12 show an increased hydrophilicity compared to the parental prodrug of formula IV ##STR16## as shown by a reduced octanol water coefficient. This increased hydrophilicity leads to more favourable pharmacokinetics combined with a reduced toxicity and a more efficient site specific activation. This favourable observation is mediated by the action of at least two enzymes. The plasmatic esterases first convert the pro-prodrugs into prodrugs. These prodrugs are site specifically activated to toxic drugs by the action of a targeted glucuronidase and/or by lysosomal glucuronidases liberated in inflamed sites or in necrotic tumor tissues. The above mentioned two step activation mechanism results in a superior drug concentration at the target site compared to the drug concentrations obtained, if the MTD of the drug or the MTD of the parental prodrug is applied. As a consequence therapeutic efficacy is increased.
The use of this new site specific drug delivery systems thus results in a significant increase of the therapeutic window, which is defined as the ratio between the maximally tolerable dose and the minimal effective dose. Further improvements are achievable by encapsulation of these pro-prodrugs in stealth liposomes.
Example 13
Pro-produgs (example 1) can be encapsulated according to D. Papahadjopoulos et al. (PNAS, USA 88:11460-11464, 1991) into stealth liposomes. After i.v. injection into CD1 nu/nu mice the plasma clearance of the pro-prodrug encapsulated into stealth liposomes should be prolonged from .apprxeq.20 min for the free pro-prodrug to .apprxeq.40 hrs for the encapsulated pro-produg. The significant t1/2.beta. prolongation should lead to improved pharmacological efficacy.
Claims
  • 1. A compound of the formula I
  • (prodrug).sub.x -S (I)
  • wherein
  • S is a substrate moiety to which one or more prodrug moieties is or are bound and wherein the prodrug-S bond or bonds can be cleaved by a first activating enzyme and where for optimal cleavage S can be linked to the prodrug moiety by a spacer which can be self-immolative
  • wherein
  • the prodrug is a compound of the formula II
  • glycosyl-spacer-drug (II)
  • which is cleaved by a second activating enzyme to generate a pharmacologically active substance, and x is 1 or an integer,
  • wherein
  • the first and second activating enzymes are at least two different human enzymes one of them located accessible only at the target site, and the other one located systemically or at a different site of the body,
  • said (prodrug).sub.x -S having the structure: ##STR17## wherein one of R.sub.1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 is a mono- or oligophosphate, sulfate, a polymeric residue ##STR18## where p and r are 0 to 100, a polyglutamate where p is 0 to 100,
  • a phosphodiester ##STR19## where p and r are 0 to 100, or a phosphodiester substituted with polyethylene glycol or with polysialic acid
  • and the other R's are independently of each other H or OH,
  • wherein R.sub.6 may be an electron withdrawing residue,
  • wherein X is O, NH or S,
  • wherein Y may be COOH, PO.sub.3 H.sub.2, --CH.sub.2 --COOH, --CH.sub.2 --PO.sub.3 H.sub.2, CHOH--COOH or CHOH--PO.sub.3 H.sub.2,
  • wherein each of m and n is 0 or 1, and one of m or n is 1.
  • 2. A pharmaceutical composition containing an effective amount of a compound of the formula I having the structure set forth in claim 1.
  • 3. A pharmaceutical composition according to claim 2 also containing pretargeted enzymes.
  • 4. A pharmaceutical composition according to claim 2 encapsulated in liposomes.
  • 5. A compound according to claim 1 wherein p and r are 1-30.
  • 6. A compound according to claim 1 wherein in the polyglutamate, p is 1 to 30.
  • 7. A compound according to claim 1 wherein in the phosphodiester p and r are 1-30.
  • 8. A compound according to claim 1 wherein the electron withdrawing residue is a nitro-, fluoro- or chloro-residue.
  • 9. A compound according to claim 1 wherein the first and second activating enzymes are hydrolases.
  • 10. A compound according to claim 9 wherein the firstactivating enzymes are esterases, and the second activating enzymes are glycosidases.
  • 11. A compound according to claim 9 wherein the first activating enzymes are phosphatases.
  • 12. A compound according to claim 10 wherein the glycosidases are .beta.-glucuronidases.
  • 13. A compound according to claim 1, wherein the hydrophilic substrate moiety is a mono- or oligophosphate, sulfate or dicarboxylate.
  • 14. A compound according to claim 1, wherein the polymeric substrate moiety is a polyglutamate, polysialic acid, polyethylene glycol or an N-(2-hydroxypropyl)methacrylamide copolymer.
Priority Claims (1)
Number Date Country Kind
93115234 Sep 1993 EPX
US Referenced Citations (10)
Number Name Date Kind
3803124 Arcamone et al. Apr 1974
4337760 Rubin Jul 1982
4351937 Stefanska et al. Sep 1982
4975278 Senter et al. Dec 1990
5087616 Myers et al. Feb 1992
5132290 Priebe et al. Jul 1992
5417970 Roskam et al. May 1995
5470843 Stahl et al. Nov 1995
5561119 Jacquesy et al. Oct 1996
5618528 Cooper et al. Apr 1997
Foreign Referenced Citations (4)
Number Date Country
P1917874 Nov 1969 DEX
2943438 May 1980 DEX
2033393 May 1980 GBX
WO9219639 Nov 1992 WOX
Non-Patent Literature Citations (5)
Entry
M. Israel et al., Adriamycin Analogues. J. Med. Chem., 1986, 29, 1273-1276.
Budman et al., Abstract No. 692, presented at the 18th Int. Congress of Chemotherapy, Jun. 27-Jul. 2, 1993.
Ruth Duncan "Review Paper: Drug-polymer conjugates: potential for improved chemotherapy," Anti-Cancer Drugs 1992, vol. 3, pp. 175-210.
Kato et al, A Novel Method of Conjugation of Daunomycin with Antibody with a Poly-L-Glutamic Acid Derivative as Intermediate Drug Carrier, J. Med. Chem., 1984, 27, pp. 1602-1607.
Bundgaerd "The Double Prodrug Concept and its Applications", Advanced Drug Delivery Reviews, 3, pp. 39-65, 1989.