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Cyanobacterial peptides as a prototype for the design of cathepsin D inhibitors.

Cathepsin D (Cath D) is overexpressed and secreted in a number of solid tumors and involved in the progress of tumor invasion, proliferation, metastasis, and apoptosis. Inhibition of Cath D is regarded as an attractive pathway for the development of novel anticancer drugs. Our previous studies revealed that tasiamide B, a cyanobacterial peptide that contained a statine-like unit, exhibited good inhibition against Cath D and other aspartic proteases. Using this natural product as prototype, we designed and synthesized three new analogs, which bear isophthalic acid fragment at the N-terminus and isobutyl amine (1), cyclopropyl amine (2), or 3-methoxybenzyl amine (3) moiety at the C-terminus. Enzymatic assays revealed that all these three compounds showed moderate-to-good inhibition against Cath D, with IC50 s of 15, 884, and 353 nM, respectively. Notably, compound 1 showed extreme selectivity for Cath D with 576-fold over Cath E and 554-fold over BACE1, which could be a valuable template for the design of highly potent and selective Cath D inhibitors. Additionally, compound 1 showed moderated activity against HeLa cell lines with IC50 of 41.8 μM. Copyright © 2017 European Peptide Society and John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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