4.3 Article

The Substantial Improvement of Amphotcricin B Selective Toxicity Upon Modification of Mycosamine with Bulky Substituents

Journal

MEDICINAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 16, Issue 1, Pages 128-139

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/1573406415666181203114629

Keywords

Antifungal agent; amphotericin B; chemical modification; selective toxicity; hemotoxicity; potassium efflux

Funding

  1. National Centre for Research and Development [POIG.01.04.00-22-064/09-00]
  2. National Science Centre [UMO2014/13/B/NZ7/02305]

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Background: It is assumed that the unfavorable selective toxicity of an antifungal drug Amphotericin B (AmB) can be improved upon chemical modification of the antibiotic molecule. Objective: The aim of this study was verification of the hypothesis that introduction of bulky substituents at the amino sugar moiety of the antibiotic may result in diminishment of mammalian in vitro toxicity of thus prepared AmB derivatives. Methods: Twenty-eight derivatives of AmB were obtained upon chemical modification of the amino group of mycosamine residue. This set comprised 10 N-succinimidyl-, 4 N-benzyl-, 5 N-thioureidyl- and 9 N-aminoacyl derivatives. Parameters characterizing biological in vitro activity of novel compounds were determined. Results: All the novel compounds demonstrated lower than AmB antifungal in vitro activity but most of them exhibited negligible cytotoxicity against human erythrocytes and three mammalian cell lines. In consequence, the selective toxicity of majority of novel antifungals, reflected by the selective toxicity index (STI = EH50/IC50) was improved in comparison with that of AmB, especially in the case of 5 compounds. The novel AmB derivatives with the highest STI, induced substantial potassium efflux from Candida aihicans cells at concentrations slightly lower than 10(50)s but did not trigger potassium release from human erythrocytes at concentrations lower than 100 mu g/mL. Conclusion: Some of the novel AmB derivatives can be considered promising antifungal drug candidates.

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