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  • Title: Synthesis and cytotoxicity of 4-amino-5-oxopyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidine nucleosides.
    Author: Girardet JL, Gunic E, Esler C, Cieslak D, Pietrzkowski Z, Wang G.
    Journal: J Med Chem; 2000 Oct 05; 43(20):3704-13. PubMed ID: 11020285.
    Abstract:
    A number of nucleoside analogues have been either used clinically as anticancer drugs or evaluated in clinical studies, while new nucleoside analogues continue to show promise. In this article, we report synthesis and cytotoxicity of a series of new pyrido[2, 3-d]pyrimidine nucleosides. 2-Amino-3-cyano-4-methoxypyridine was converted, in two steps, to 4-amino-5-oxopyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidine. A variety of 1-O-acetylated pentose sugar derivatives were condensed with silylated 4-amino-5-oxopyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidine, followed by protection, to afford a series of 4-amino-5-oxopyrido[2, 3-d]pyrimidine nucleosides. Further derivatizations provided an additional group of pyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidine nucleosides. These nucleosides were evaluated for in vitro cytotoxicity to human prostate cancer (HTB-81) and mouse melanoma (B16) cells as well as normal human fibroblasts (NHF). A number of compounds (1a,b, 2a-c,f, 3f+4d) showed significant cytotoxicity to cancer cells, with 4-amino-5-oxo-8-(beta-D-ribofuranosyl)pyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidine (1b) being the most potent proliferation inhibitor (EC(50): 0.06-0.08 microM) to all types of cells tested. However, a selective inhibition to the cancer cells was observed for 4-amino-5-oxo-8-(beta-D-xylofuranosyl)pyrido[2,3-d]pyrimidine (2b), which is a potent inhibitor of HTB-81 (EC(50): 0.73 microM) and has a favorable in vitro selectivity index (28).
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