135643-29-7Relevant articles and documents
17α -Substituted analogs of estradiol for the development of fluorescent estrogen receptor ligands
Salman, Mohammad,Reddy,Delgado, Pete,Stotterl, Philip L.,Fulcher, Letitia C.,Chamness, Gary C.
, p. 375 - 387 (2007/10/02)
For the successful development of a high-affinity fluorophore-estradiol conjugate, the fluorophore must be attached to the estradiol molecule at a position that interferes least with its binding to the receptor. We have concentrated on 17α. substituents as models for fluorophore attachment, based on literature precedent and on our earlier work with small 17α. side chains. In this report, we describe syntheses and estrogen receptor binding affinities of 19 analogs of estradiol substituted in the 17α position with larger side chains (of six to 11 carbons), some of which may be synthetically modified to link a fluorophore. These analogs were synthesized either by nucleophilic cleavage of estrone-17β-oxirane 3-benzyl ether and subsequent debenzylation (4 to 18), by cross-coupling of alkynes (21 to 24), by alkylation of 17 αethynylestradiol 3,17-bis(tetrahydropyranyl ether) and subsequent acidic hydrolysis (25 to 28), or by reacting estrone either with appropriate aryllalkynyllithium reagents (29,30, and 32) or with benzylmagnesium bromide (31). Relative binding affinities of these newly synthesized analogs were determined for estrogen receptor (rat uterus) using a standard competition assay. The results suggest that analogs with reduced mobility and/or more polarizable electron density in the side chain generally bind more strongly to the receptor. The relative affinities of several selected compounds were also determined in the presence of 4% dimethylformamide; some compounds bearing larger, nonpolar 17α. substituents showed dramatically improved affinities, while affinities for compounds with shorter nonpolar side chains remained largely unchanged. These binding affinity results should be useful in designing new high-affinity fluorescent ligands for the estrogen receptor.