Novel Drug Design Modified Megestrol by Group II.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Website for lectures and course book: ~regobto/ ~regobto/
Advertisements

Novel Drug Marketing Group 2 Mahinda C. Edirisooriya.
1 Mechanism Testing of the Drug (Modified Megestrol) Mr.Pasavi Ratchapongsirikul.
Tumor Markers Lecture one By Dr. Reem Sallam. Objectives  To briefly introduce cancers, their incidence, some common terms, and staging system.  To.
Cancer Cancer accounted for 7.1 million deaths world-wide (12.5%). Ranks as 3 of the top 10 leading causes of death world wide. 11 million are diagnosed.
Etiology of cancer: Carcinogenic agents
Gene Expression Viruses Biotechnology
Controlling a Killer Malfunction By: Brady Sebo, Tom Fish, Addela Marzofka, and Colton Cummings
Vaccines and Antivirals. Clinical Use of Interferon Therefore they have been used in the treatment of cancers of various types. Therefore they have been.
Marek’s Disease Virus (And correlation of resistance to Marek’s disease virus with the chicken B21 haplotype)
 MicroRNAs (miRNAs) are a class of small RNA molecules, about ~21 nucleotide (nt) long.  MicroRNA are small non coding RNAs (ncRNAs) that regulate.
Copyright © 2015 Cengage Learning® Chapter 14 Antineoplastic Drugs.
1 Antimicrobial Therapy Chemotherapy: any treatment of patient with chemicals to treat a condition. –Now word associated with cancer treatment –Our focus.
PCR Application: Can Breast Cancer be Cured?. Normal, Healthy Cells Cells can change or differentiate to become specialised according to the tissue that.
Prepared by Dr. Ammar C. Al-Rikabi & Dr. Ghassan Zidan.
Production of Modified Megestrol by Jittima Khorungkul.
Chemotherapy of Medulloblastoma By: Minh Trinh. Objectives Briefly describe chemotherapy of medulloblastoma Discuss different regimens used for therapy.
Cancer therapy - conventional Surgery Radiotherapy Chemotherapy Adjuvant therapies.
Inquiry into Life Twelfth Edition Chapter 25 Lecture PowerPoint to accompany Sylvia S. Mader Copyright © The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. Permission required.
Chapter 11 Objectives Section 1 Control of Gene Expression
ANTINEOPLASTICS I: GENERAL CONCEPTS
 Identify different options of cancer therapy.  Most cancers are treated with a combination of approaches.
Biosignaling Cells - receive and act on signals Signal brings about response Types of signals: Autocrine - acting on same cell that produces them Paracrine.
Nanocell: Mechanism of action
Control of Gene Activity Chapter 17. Controlling gene activity Remember to control the cell one must control protein synthesis. Remember to control the.
Cancer A Disease Resulting from Uncontrolled Cell Growth.
Cancer A Disease Resulting from Uncontrolled Cell Growth.
Afsha Rais.  In chromatins, DNA is wrapped around proteins of which most are histones.  Histones assist in DNA packaging and have a regulatory role.
Computational biology of cancer cell pathways Modelling of cancer cell function and response to therapy.
Chapter 10: Chemical-Induced Mutagenesis. DNA and Mutations A mutation is a permanent change in the DNA. DNA is in our chromosomes and it codes for all.
Principles of Chemotherapy. Objectives At the completion of this session the participant will be able to: ◦ Define combination chemotherapy ◦ Recognize.
Michael Cummings David Reisman University of South Carolina Gene Regulation Part 2 Chapter 9.
KEY CONCEPT Cell cycle regulation is necessary for healthy growth.
P53 Missense Mutation Cancer. Outline Disease related to p53 Role and regulation pathway Structure of p53 Missense mutation and consequences Experiment’s.
Regulation of Gene Expression. You Must Know The functions of the three parts of an operon. The role of repressor genes in operons. The impact of DNA.
Slide 1 Copyright © 2007, 2004 by Mosby, Inc., an affiliate of Elsevier Inc. Chapter 44 Drugs Affecting Neoplasms.
Other Modes of Treatment
ROLE OF GENE EXPRESSION:  Activation of a gene that results in a protein  Cells DO NOT need to produce proteins for every code. GENOME:  Complete genetic.
Prognostic and Predictive Factors: Current Evidence for Individualized Therapy Predictive Molecular Markers: Hormone Receptor Status Presented by Kathleen.
Biochemistry Sixth Edition Chapter 31 The Control of Gene Expression Part II: Eukaryotes (cis vs. trans) Copyright © 2007 by W. H. Freeman and Company.
ONCOLOGY Cytotoxic Agents. ONCOLOGY Cytotoxic agents Selective toxicity based on characteristics that distinguish malignant cells from normal cells Antineoplastic.
Clinical Division of Oncology Department of Medicine I Medical University of Vienna, Austria Cytotoxic Agents.
Lecture 12: Cancer: a cellular perspective Dr. Mamoun Ahram Faculty of Medicine Second year, Second semester, Principles of Genetics and Molecular.
CONTROLLING GENE EXPRESSION CHAPTER 11. GENE EXPRESSION - occurs in the DNA- prior to TRANSCRIPTION the activation of a gene that results in the formation.
“Hepatocellular Carcinoma” (HCC) By Faiza Asghar.
Cancer Therapies DNA microarrays are used to assess the relative expression of thousands of genes simultaneously—relative expression means that.
How is gene expression in eukaryotes accomplished ?
YOUR CANCER TREATMENT: WHAT TO EXPECT FROM THE LATEST ADVANCEMENTS MIRIAM J. ATKINS, M.D.
LEARNING GOALS: I CAN… …understand how cancerous (malignant) tumors evolve within the body. …describe different stages in diagnosing cancer. …explain.
ABIRA KHAN TUMOR MARKERS & CANCER TREATMENT. TUMOR MARKERS Biological substances synthesized and released by cancer cells or produced by the host in response.
Basic Biochemistry. What is Biochemistry?  Biochemistry is the study of the chemical interactions of living things.  Biochemists study the structures.
ANTINEOPLASTIC DRUGS - MOLECULAR TARGETED AGENTS WEEK-9 MR160 Chapter 29 (p ) Chapter 31 (p )
انزيمات 5 Chemotherapy Drugs
SURGICAL ONCOLOGY AND TUMOR MARKERS
Molecular Genetics: Part 2B Regulation of metabolic pathways:
Anti- CANCER drugs Dr. Mohammed Abd-Almoneim
Nivolumab Drugbank ID : DB09035 Molecular Weight (Daltons) :
Pembrolizumab Drugbank ID :DB09037 Half life : 28 days.
Genetics In Breast Cancer
By uzair hashmi Interferon.
The Genetic Basis of Cancer
Cell Signaling (Lecture 1)
Cell Signaling.
Extracellular Regulation of Apoptosis
Selective estrogen receptor modulation
Unit III Information Essential to Life Processes
PHYTOCHEMICALS -VILLAIN OR HERO-
Bin Gao, Hua Wang, Fouad Lafdil, Dechun Feng  Journal of Hepatology 
Drug-Receptor Interactions
Presentation transcript:

Novel Drug Design Modified Megestrol by Group II

Introduction Hepatocellular carcinoma  Occur almost in patients witn - Chronic hapatitis virus C and/or B infection - Cirrhosis  Represent the final step of the natural course for virus induced liver disease  More than 500,000 people are diagnosed each year throughout the world and over a million death per year  More common in developing country in Africa and East asia

 More frequent in men than in women  No specific drug for the treatment  Risk factors: - HVB - HVC - aflatoxin - alcohol - sex hormones Geographic distribution of hepatocellular carcinoma.Incidence rates (%) in total population A, female; B, male.

Estrogen Receptor (ER)  Receptor for estrogen located intracellular in many organs  Contain a specific site to which only estrogens (or closely related molecules) can bind  Act as a transcription factor, regulate the reading of DNA and production of protein  Two different ER are usually call  and  receptor

Estrogen function as signaling molecule

Estrogen Receptor in Liver  ER  has been well characterized in human liver Normal Liver  wild-type ERs Hepatocellular carcinoma  wild-type ERs  Variant form of ER (vER) exon 5 deletion (ER  5)

Variant from of Estrogen Receptor and Hepatocellular carcinoma  vER largely predominates in HCC  vER appears most frequent in patients infected with Hepatitis B virus  Growth rate of HCC in patient with vER higher than patient with wtER  vER  elevate proliferation rate  tumor aggressiveness  lack of hormonal control on tumor growth  (ER  5) ---- > lack the hormone binding domain but being intact in the DNA-binding domain

Chemotherapy “The use of chemical substances to treat the disease” Types Alkylating agents Plant Alkaloids Antitumor Antibiotics Antimetabolites Topoisomerase inhibitors Miscellaneous Antineoplastics Hormonal therapy

Alkylating agents Add alkyl groups to many electronegative groups e.g Nitrogen mustard (cytotoxic chemotherapy) Hormonal therapy e.g.  Tamoxifen  Megestrol acetate Competitive binding to the receptor and block the action of hormone and thereby interfere with, or even prevent, the proliferation of cancer cell

Megestrol acetate  A synthetic female hormone belonging to the progesterone group  Survival of HCC patients therapy with megestrol acetate is increase  Slowdown tumor growth  Drug able to block both wtER and vER  Anti estrogen action  Usually for women whose cancers do not respond to the other hormone treatments

Bifunctional molecule  Produce DNA adducts  Specific bind the estrogen receptor - Inhibit DNA repair - Induction of growth inhibition, apoptosis and antitumor activity - Consist of => War head => Linker => ligand binding domain Modified Megestrol

Presentation Outline - Production Ms. Jittima Khorungkul - Mechanism Testing of the Drug Mr. Pasavi Ratchapongsirikul - Preclinical Study Ms. Sirikan Nawapan - Clinical Trial Ms. Carolina Rusdy Akib - Marketing Mr. Mahinda Chandrasiri Edirisooriya

Production of Modified Megestrol by Jittima Khorungkul

Modified Megestrol Production Goal: Synthesis bifunctional molecule that can use in Liver cancer treatment Bifucntional molecule:  Produce DNA adduct  Specific binding the estrogen receptor with high affinity

Megestrol Estrogen receptor DNA adduct Binding to vER Bifunctional molecule structure Ligand Domain Linker War Head

Expression of essential gene Undamaged cell Nuclear protein (e.g.ER) promoter How modified megestrol work….. Estrogen and ER complex

Adduct shielded from Repair DNA repair enzyme Adduct persists

Adduct shielded from Repair In non-cancer cell (less express of vER) DNA repair enzyme adduct

Adduct shielded from Repair Cancer cell (over express of vER)

Adduct “Hijacks” Transcription Factor X Cancer cell (over express of vER)

Modified megestrol N,N -bis-chloroethylaniline (War Head) Alkyl-amino-carbamate (Linker) Megestrol acetate (Ligand Domain) Consisted of : (CH 2 ) 6 -N-(CH 2 ) 2 -0 N-(CH 2 ) 3 - -N H O H (CH 2 ) 2 C l Ligand DomainLinker War Head

Modified megestrol Megestrol acetate (Ligand Domain) -Binding to the linker at 7 alpha position  Large alkyl groups can be attached with retention of high affinity for ER Megestrol acetate 7 alpha position

Modified megestrol N,N -bis-chloroethylaniline (War Head) - Ability to alkylate DNA - From covalent DNA adduct at the N7 position of guanines

Modified megestrol Alkyl-amino-carbamate (Linker) Consist of - amino - carbarmate group  provide a relatively rigid connection  resistant to hydrolytic enzyme

Synthesis Procedure (1) (2) (3) (4)(5)

Synthesis Procedure

Final Product: Modified megestrol

Properties of Modified Megestrol Chemical Formula: C 42 H 65 Cl 2 N 3 O 4 Exact Mass: Molecular weight: Element Analysis: C, 67.54; H, 8.77; Cl, 9.49; N, 5.63; O, 8.57

Summary Modified Megestrol -Modified Megestrol is the bifunctional molecule that consist of ‘Warhead’, ‘Linker’ and ‘Ligand binding domain’ -It has the abilities to produce DNA adduct and capable of binding the vER - vER-DNA adduct complexes will shielded from DNA repair enzyme War head Linker Megestrol acetate