For research use only. Not for therapeutic Use.
Hepsulfam (NCI 329680; ZINC01574758) is a anticancer agent that shows excellent antileukemic activity with an median IC50 of 0.91 μg/mL in a panel of different tumors.
At a concentration of 1.0 μg/mL, hepsulfam is active in eight of 37 tumors (22%) in the clonogenic assay. Hepsulfam demonstrates a clear in vitro toxicity to human bone marrow cells (CFU-GM) from healthy donors. Evaluation of equitoxic concentrations in vitro reveals a higher activity of hepsulfam, especially in non-small cell lung cancer[1]. Hepsulfam is more toxic to L1210 leukemia cells than is busulfan, its structural homologue . Consistent with the difference in toxicity, hepsulfam induces DNA interstrand cross-links in L1210 mouse leukemia cells, whereas busulfan does not. Hepsulfam is more cytotoxic to two human leukemia cell lines (111-60 and K562) and to two human colon carcinoma cell lines (BE and HT-29) than is busulfan. As in 11210 cells, hepsulfam induces a higher level of DNA interstrand cross-links than busulfan. Hepsulfam is also more cytotoxic to the human leukemia cell lines when the concentrations are reduced 10-fold and the duration of drug exposure is increased to 12 h[2].
Hepsulfam demonstrates superior in vivo activity in a large cell lung cancer xenograft and a gastric carcinoma model. The preclinical activity of hepsulfam suggests a possible role of this compound in the treatment of solid human malignancies. However, the increased bone marrow toxicity of hepsulfam as compared with busulfan might be critical for further clinical application[1].
Catalog Number | I007203 |
CAS Number | 96892-57-8 |
Synonyms | 7-sulfamoyloxyheptyl sulfamate |
Molecular Formula | C7H18N2O6S2 |
Purity | ≥95% |
InChI | InChI=1S/C7H18N2O6S2/c8-16(10,11)14-6-4-2-1-3-5-7-15-17(9,12)13/h1-7H2,(H2,8,10,11)(H2,9,12,13) |
InChIKey | GOJJWDOZNKBUSR-UHFFFAOYSA-N |
SMILES | C(CCCOS(=O)(=O)N)CCCOS(=O)(=O)N |
Reference | [1]. Berger DP, et al. Preclinical activity of hepsulfam and busulfan in solid human tumor xenografts and human bone marrow. Anticancer Drugs. 1992 Oct;3(5):531-9. [2]. Pacheco DY, et al. Mechanisms of toxicity of hepsulfam in human tumor cell lines. Cancer Res. 1990 Dec 1;50(23):7555-8. |