Page last updated: 2024-11-12

tosedostat

Description Research Excerpts Clinical Trials Roles Classes Pathways Study Profile Bioassays Related Drugs Related Conditions Protein Interactions Research Growth Market Indicators

Cross-References

ID SourceID
PubMed CID15547703
CHEMBL ID2103847
CHEBI ID95044
SCHEMBL ID19236550
MeSH IDM0525489

Synonyms (48)

Synonym
238750-77-1
chr-2797 ,
bb-76163
tosedostat ,
chr 2797
tosedostat (usan/inn)
D10026
tosedostat [usan:inn]
unii-kzk563j2uw
kzk563j2uw ,
benzeneacetic acid, alpha-(((2r)-2-((1s)-1-hydroxy-2-(hydroxyamino)-2-oxoethyl)-4-methyl-1-oxopentyl)amino)-, cyclopentyl ester, (alphas)-
BCP9000524
tosedostat (chr2797)
CHEMBL2103847
BCPP000283
NCGC00263175-01
tosedostat [inn]
benzeneacetic acid, .alpha.-(((2r)-2-((1s)-1-hydroxy-2-(hydroxyamino)-2-oxoethyl)-4- methyl-1-oxopenty)lamino)-, cyclopentyl ester, (.alpha.s)-
cyclopentyl (2s)-2-((2r)-2-((1s)-1-hydroxy-2-(hydroxyamino)-2-oxoethyl)-4- methylpentanamido)-2-phenylacetate
tosedostat [who-dd]
tosedostat [usan]
BRD-K92241597-001-01-1
MLS006011104
smr004676647
(s)-cyclopentyl 2-((r)-2-((s)-1-hydroxy-2-(hydroxyamino)-2-oxoethyl)-4-methylpentanamido)-2-phenylacetate
?-[[(2r)-2-[(1s)-1-hydroxy-2-(hydroxyamino)-2-oxoethyl]-4-methyl-1-oxopentyl]amino]-benzeneacetic acid cyclopently ester
AKOS024457707
DTXSID60178577
CHEBI:95044
DB11781
cyclopentyl (s)-2-((r)-2-((s)-1-hydroxy-2-(hydroxyamino)-2-oxoethyl)-4-methylpentanamido)-2-phenylacetate
SCHEMBL19236550
Q27166812
chr-2797; tosedostat
EX-A2628
HMS3678A15
bdbm50277143
HY-14807
CS-0003570
HMS3414A15
nsc-806020
nsc806020
A857789
alpha-[[(2r)-2-[(1s)-1-hydroxy-2-(hydroxyamino)-2-oxoethyl]-4-methyl-1-oxopentyl]amino]benzeneacetic acid cyclopentyl ester
AT25061
AS-55983
chr-2797(tosedostat)
AC-35830

Research Excerpts

Overview

Tosedostat is an orally administered metalloenzyme inhibitor with antiproliferative and antiangiogenic activity against hematological and solid human cancers. In phase I/II trials showed acceptable toxicity and encouraging efficacy.

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
"Tosedostat is an inhibitor of aminopeptidases currently in phase II clinical trials for the treatment of blood-related cancers. "( Discovery of Anticancer Clinical Candidate, Tosedostat, As an Analgesic Agent.
More, SS; Singh, R; Vince, R; Williams, J; Xie, W, 2019
)
2.22
"Tosedostat is an orally administered metalloenzyme inhibitor with antiproliferative and antiangiogenic activity against hematological and solid human cancers. "( Gene expression profile predicts response to the combination of tosedostat and low-dose cytarabine in elderly AML.
Candoni, A; Clavio, M; Dennis, M; Giannini, B; Gibellini, D; Gilkes, A; Isidori, A; Loscocco, F; Mianulli, AM; Musuraca, G; Navari, M; Piccaluga, PP; Rocchi, M; Sensi, A; Visani, G; Zuffa, E, 2020
)
2.24
"Tosedostat is a selective oral aminopeptidase inhibitor, which in phase I/II trials showed acceptable toxicity and encouraging efficacy."( A randomised evaluation of low-dose cytosine arabinoside (ara-C) plus tosedostat versus low-dose ara-C in older patients with acute myeloid leukaemia: results of the LI-1 trial.
Ariti, C; Burnett, A; Clark, RE; Copland, M; Dennis, M; Greaves, P; Hemmaway, C; Hills, R; Russell, N; Severinsen, MT; Thomas, I, 2021
)
1.58
"Tosedostat is a novel oral aminopeptidase inhibitor with clinical activity in a previous phase 1-2 study in elderly patients with relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukaemia (AML). "( Two dosing regimens of tosedostat in elderly patients with relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukaemia (OPAL): a randomised open-label phase 2 study.
Advani, AS; Charman, A; Cortes, J; Feldman, E; Kantarjian, H; Rizzieri, D; Spruyt, R; Toal, M; Yee, K, 2013
)
2.14
"Tosedostat is an oral agent with a novel mechanism of action. "( Tosedostat for the treatment of relapsed and refractory acute myeloid leukemia.
Cortes, JE; DiNardo, CD, 2014
)
3.29
"Tosedostat is an orally available aminopeptidase inhibitor shown to have activity in leukemia."( Efficacy of tosedostat, a novel, oral agent for elderly patients with relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukemia: a review of the Phase II OPAL trial.
Mathisen, MS; Ravandi, F, 2012
)
1.48

Toxicity

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" Most frequently observed drug-related adverse events were alopecia, fatigue (95% each), peripheral sensory neuropathy (59%), paclitaxel hypersensitivity (59%) and rash (55%)."( A Phase Ib dose-escalation study to evaluate safety and tolerability of the addition of the aminopeptidase inhibitor tosedostat (CHR-2797) to paclitaxel in patients with advanced solid tumours.
Bone, EA; de Jonge, M; Desar, I; Eskens, FA; Hooftman, L; Timmer-Bonte, JN; van Herpen, CM; Verweij, J, 2010
)
0.57

Bioavailability

To determine the maximum tolerated dose, dose-limiting toxicity, pharmacokinetics, and preliminary therapeutic activity profile of CHR-2797 (tosedostat)

ExcerptReferenceRelevance
" CHR-2797 is orally bioavailable and currently undergoing phase II clinical investigation in the treatment of myeloid leukemia."( CHR-2797: an antiproliferative aminopeptidase inhibitor that leads to amino acid deprivation in human leukemic cells.
Ayscough, A; Bawden, LJ; Bone, EA; Box, G; Callaghan, J; Chandler, S; Clark, VL; Drummond, AH; Eccles, SA; Farmer, H; Flores, N; Kirwin-Jones, P; Krige, D; Laber, D; Legris, V; Miles, LE; Needham, LA; Odedra, R; Owen, J; Patel, T; Stone, E; Wood, LM; Wood, S; Wright, A, 2008
)
0.35
"To determine the maximum tolerated dose, dose-limiting toxicity, pharmacokinetics, and preliminary therapeutic activity profile of CHR-2797 (tosedostat), a novel, orally bioavailable inhibitor of the M1 family of aminopeptidases with antiproliferative and antiangiogenic activity in vitro."( A first-in-man phase i and pharmacokinetic study on CHR-2797 (Tosedostat), an inhibitor of M1 aminopeptidases, in patients with advanced solid tumors.
Attard, G; Bone, EA; Carter, J; De Bono, JS; Harris, A; Hayward, N; Hooftman, L; Protheroe, A; Reid, AH; Shaw, HM; Spicer, J; Vidal, L, 2009
)
0.79
"To identify the maximum-tolerated dose (MTD) and to evaluate the antileukemic activity of tosedostat (formerly CHR-2797), an orally bioavailable aminopeptidase inhibitor."( Phase I/II clinical study of Tosedostat, an inhibitor of aminopeptidases, in patients with acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplasia.
Bone, E; Burnett, AK; Davies, F; Dierickx, D; Dührsen, U; Flores, N; Hooftman, L; Jenkins, C; Krug, U; Löwenberg, B; Morgan, G; Müller-Tidow, C; Ossenkoppele, GJ; Richardson, AF; Sonneveld, P; Zachée, P; Zweegman, S, 2010
)
0.87
"This Phase Ib dose-escalating study investigated safety, maximum tolerated dose (MTD), dose-limiting toxicity (DLT), pharmacokinetics (PK) and clinical antitumour activity of tosedostat (CHR-2797), an orally bioavailable aminopeptidase inhibitor, in combination with paclitaxel."( A Phase Ib dose-escalation study to evaluate safety and tolerability of the addition of the aminopeptidase inhibitor tosedostat (CHR-2797) to paclitaxel in patients with advanced solid tumours.
Bone, EA; de Jonge, M; Desar, I; Eskens, FA; Hooftman, L; Timmer-Bonte, JN; van Herpen, CM; Verweij, J, 2010
)
0.76
" This orally bioavailable agent has shown promising activity in vitro and in early clinical trials for patients with relapsed/refractory AML."( Tosedostat for the treatment of relapsed and refractory acute myeloid leukemia.
Cortes, JE; DiNardo, CD, 2014
)
1.85
"The ATP-binding cassette transporter P-glycoprotein (P-gp) is known to limit both brain penetration and oral bioavailability of many chemotherapy drugs."( A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
Ambudkar, SV; Brimacombe, KR; Chen, L; Gottesman, MM; Guha, R; Hall, MD; Klumpp-Thomas, C; Lee, OW; Lee, TD; Lusvarghi, S; Robey, RW; Shen, M; Tebase, BG, 2019
)
0.51

Dosage Studied

This phase I/II study demonstrates that oral once daily dosing with 130 mg tosedostat is well tolerated and has significant antileukemic activity. A high number of paclitaxel infusion reactions was noted during the second administration (59%) and this prompted interruption of to Sedostat dosing for 5 days around every second.

ExcerptRelevanceReference
"This phase I/II study demonstrates that oral once daily dosing with 130 mg tosedostat is well tolerated and has significant antileukemic activity."( Phase I/II clinical study of Tosedostat, an inhibitor of aminopeptidases, in patients with acute myeloid leukemia and myelodysplasia.
Bone, E; Burnett, AK; Davies, F; Dierickx, D; Dührsen, U; Flores, N; Hooftman, L; Jenkins, C; Krug, U; Löwenberg, B; Morgan, G; Müller-Tidow, C; Ossenkoppele, GJ; Richardson, AF; Sonneveld, P; Zachée, P; Zweegman, S, 2010
)
0.88
" A high number of paclitaxel infusion reactions was noted during the second administration (59%) and this prompted interruption of tosedostat dosing for 5 days around every second and subsequent paclitaxel infusion."( A Phase Ib dose-escalation study to evaluate safety and tolerability of the addition of the aminopeptidase inhibitor tosedostat (CHR-2797) to paclitaxel in patients with advanced solid tumours.
Bone, EA; de Jonge, M; Desar, I; Eskens, FA; Hooftman, L; Timmer-Bonte, JN; van Herpen, CM; Verweij, J, 2010
)
0.77
" We aimed to compare two dosing regimens of tosedostat."( Two dosing regimens of tosedostat in elderly patients with relapsed or refractory acute myeloid leukaemia (OPAL): a randomised open-label phase 2 study.
Advani, AS; Charman, A; Cortes, J; Feldman, E; Kantarjian, H; Rizzieri, D; Spruyt, R; Toal, M; Yee, K, 2013
)
0.96
[information is derived through text-mining from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Drug Classes (3)

ClassDescription
secondary carboxamideA carboxamide resulting from the formal condensation of a carboxylic acid with a primary amine; formula RC(=O)NHR(1).
hydroxamic acidA compound, RkE(=O)lNHOH, derived from an oxoacid RkE(=O)l(OH) (l =/= 0) by replacing -OH with -NHOH, and derivatives thereof. Specific examples of hydroxamic acids are preferably named as N-hydroxy amides.
carboxylic esterAn ester of a carboxylic acid, R(1)C(=O)OR(2), where R(1) = H or organyl and R(2) = organyl.
[compound class information is derived from Chemical Entities of Biological Interest (ChEBI), Hastings J, Owen G, Dekker A, Ennis M, Kale N, Muthukrishnan V, Turner S, Swainston N, Mendes P, Steinbeck C. (2016). ChEBI in 2016: Improved services and an expanding collection of metabolites. Nucleic Acids Res]

Protein Targets (14)

Potency Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverage (µ)Min (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
Fumarate hydrataseHomo sapiens (human)Potency37.22120.00308.794948.0869AID1347053
PPM1D proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency29.41070.00529.466132.9993AID1347411
cytochrome P450 family 3 subfamily A polypeptide 4Homo sapiens (human)Potency3.37860.01237.983543.2770AID1645841
EWS/FLI fusion proteinHomo sapiens (human)Potency20.57880.001310.157742.8575AID1259252; AID1259253; AID1259255; AID1259256
GVesicular stomatitis virusPotency5.35470.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
polyproteinZika virusPotency37.22120.00308.794948.0869AID1347053
Interferon betaHomo sapiens (human)Potency23.39670.00339.158239.8107AID1347411; AID1645842
HLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)Potency5.35470.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
Inositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)Potency5.35470.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
cytochrome P450 2C9, partialHomo sapiens (human)Potency5.35470.01238.964839.8107AID1645842
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Inhibition Measurements

ProteinTaxonomyMeasurementAverageMin (ref.)Avg (ref.)Max (ref.)Bioassay(s)
72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.19000.00001.284810.0000AID1607846
Matrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)1.50000.00000.705310.0000AID1607847
Aminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.68000.40002.11003.9000AID1500912
Aminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)Ki1.18000.00081.956910.0000AID1607842
Puromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)IC50 (µMol)0.26000.26003.97759.7000AID1500910
[prepared from compound, protein, and bioassay information from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Biological Processes (115)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
cell surface receptor signaling pathway via JAK-STATInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cell surface receptor signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cell surface receptor signaling pathway via JAK-STATInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of autophagyInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cytokine-mediated signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
natural killer cell activationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of peptidyl-serine phosphorylation of STAT proteinInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to interferon-betaInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell proliferationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of viral genome replicationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
innate immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of innate immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
regulation of MHC class I biosynthetic processInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of T cell differentiationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of transcription by RNA polymerase IIInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
defense response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
type I interferon-mediated signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
neuron cellular homeostasisInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to virusInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of Lewy body formationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of T-helper 2 cell cytokine productionInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of apoptotic signaling pathwayInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
response to exogenous dsRNAInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
B cell differentiationInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
natural killer cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
adaptive immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
T cell activation involved in immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
humoral immune responseInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of T cell mediated cytotoxicityHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
adaptive immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
antigen processing and presentation of endogenous peptide antigen via MHC class I via ER pathway, TAP-independentHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of T cell anergyHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
defense responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
detection of bacteriumHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of interleukin-12 productionHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of interleukin-6 productionHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protection from natural killer cell mediated cytotoxicityHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
innate immune responseHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of dendritic cell differentiationHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
antigen processing and presentation of endogenous peptide antigen via MHC class IbHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
angiogenesis72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
ovarian follicle development72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
ovulation from ovarian follicle72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
luteinization72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
blood vessel maturation72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
intramembranous ossification72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
proteolysis72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cell adhesion72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
heart development72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
embryo implantation72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
parturition72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
response to xenobiotic stimulus72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
response to mechanical stimulus72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
peripheral nervous system axon regeneration72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
response to activity72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
protein metabolic process72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular matrix disassembly72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
protein catabolic process72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of cell migration72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
collagen catabolic process72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
response to retinoic acid72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to reactive oxygen species72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
response to nicotine72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
endodermal cell differentiation72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
response to hydrogen peroxide72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
response to estrogen72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of vasoconstriction72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
ephrin receptor signaling pathway72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
macrophage chemotaxis72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
response to electrical stimulus72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
response to hyperoxia72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
face morphogenesis72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
bone trabecula formation72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
prostate gland epithelium morphogenesis72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to amino acid stimulus72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to interleukin-172 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to estradiol stimulus72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to UV-A72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to fluid shear stress72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of oxidative stress-induced neuron intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathway72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
response to amyloid-beta72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of vascular associated smooth muscle cell proliferation72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular matrix organization72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
response to hypoxia72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
tissue remodeling72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
skeletal system developmentMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of protein phosphorylationMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
proteolysisMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
apoptotic processMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
embryo implantationMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
cell migrationMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular matrix disassemblyMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
macrophage differentiationMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
collagen catabolic processMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to reactive oxygen speciesMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
endodermal cell differentiationMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of apoptotic processMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of apoptotic processMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of DNA bindingMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of epidermal growth factor receptor signaling pathwayMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
ephrin receptor signaling pathwayMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of keratinocyte migrationMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to lipopolysaccharideMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to cadmium ionMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
cellular response to UV-AMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of release of cytochrome c from mitochondriaMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
regulation of neuroinflammatory responseMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of receptor bindingMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
response to amyloid-betaMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of vascular associated smooth muscle cell proliferationMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of epithelial cell differentiation involved in kidney developmentMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of intrinsic apoptotic signaling pathwayMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cation channel activityMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cysteine-type endopeptidase activity involved in apoptotic signaling pathwayMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular matrix organizationMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
angiogenesisAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
cell differentiationAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
symbiont entry into host cellAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
proteolysisAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
peptide catabolic processAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
protein polyubiquitinationPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
cellular response to hypoxiaPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
positive regulation of protein targeting to mitochondrionPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
peptide catabolic processPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
proteolysisPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
inositol phosphate metabolic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
phosphatidylinositol phosphate biosynthetic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
negative regulation of cold-induced thermogenesisInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol phosphate biosynthetic processInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Molecular Functions (32)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
cytokine activityInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
cytokine receptor bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
type I interferon receptor bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
protein bindingInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
chloramphenicol O-acetyltransferase activityInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
TAP bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
signaling receptor bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
peptide antigen bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
TAP bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
protein-folding chaperone bindingHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
fibronectin binding72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
endopeptidase activity72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
metalloendopeptidase activity72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activity72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
protein binding72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
metallopeptidase activity72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
zinc ion binding72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
endopeptidase activityMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
metalloendopeptidase activityMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
serine-type endopeptidase activityMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
collagen bindingMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
peptidase activityMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
metallopeptidase activityMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
zinc ion bindingMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
identical protein bindingMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
virus receptor activityAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
aminopeptidase activityAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
metallopeptidase activityAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
signaling receptor activityAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
metalloaminopeptidase activityAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
zinc ion bindingAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
peptide bindingAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
aminopeptidase activityPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
zinc ion bindingPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
metalloaminopeptidase activityPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
peptide bindingPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
inositol-1,3,4,5,6-pentakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol heptakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 5-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
protein bindingInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
ATP bindingInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 1-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol hexakisphosphate 3-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol 5-diphosphate pentakisphosphate 5-kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
inositol diphosphate tetrakisphosphate kinase activityInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Ceullar Components (29)

Processvia Protein(s)Taxonomy
extracellular spaceInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionInterferon betaHomo sapiens (human)
Golgi membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulumHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
Golgi apparatusHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
cell surfaceHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
ER to Golgi transport vesicle membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
secretory granule membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
phagocytic vesicle membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
early endosome membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
recycling endosome membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
lumenal side of endoplasmic reticulum membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
MHC class I protein complexHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
external side of plasma membraneHLA class I histocompatibility antigen, B alpha chain Homo sapiens (human)
collagen-containing extracellular matrix72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular region72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular space72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
nucleus72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
mitochondrion72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membrane72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
sarcomere72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
collagen-containing extracellular matrix72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular space72 kDa type IV collagenaseHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular regionMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
collagen-containing extracellular matrixMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
tertiary granule lumenMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
ficolin-1-rich granule lumenMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceMatrix metalloproteinase-9Homo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
lysosomal membraneAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
endoplasmic reticulum-Golgi intermediate compartmentAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
external side of plasma membraneAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
secretory granule membraneAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomeAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
plasma membraneAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spaceAminopeptidase NHomo sapiens (human)
nucleusPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
cytosolPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular exosomePuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
extracellular spacePuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmPuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
membranePuromycin-sensitive aminopeptidaseHomo sapiens (human)
fibrillar centerInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
nucleoplasmInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
cytosolInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
nucleusInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
cytoplasmInositol hexakisphosphate kinase 1Homo sapiens (human)
[Information is prepared from geneontology information from the June-17-2024 release]

Bioassays (65)

Assay IDTitleYearJournalArticle
AID1500911Inhibition of recombinant human C-terminal His10-tagged APN (Lys69 to Lys967 residues) at 10 uM using Ala-AMC as substrate measured for 20 mins by fluorescence assay relative to control2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-20, Volume: 139Puromycin based inhibitors of aminopeptidases for the potential treatment of hematologic malignancies.
AID1607847Inhibition of MMP9 (unknown origin) using QF-24 as substrate preincubated for 1 hr followed by substrate addition and measured at 1 min interval for 1 hr by fluorescence assay2019Journal of medicinal chemistry, 08-08, Volume: 62, Issue:15
Novel Human Aminopeptidase N Inhibitors: Discovery and Optimization of Subsite Binding Interactions.
AID1500917Antiproliferative activity against human MOLT4 cells after 72 hrs by MTT assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-20, Volume: 139Puromycin based inhibitors of aminopeptidases for the potential treatment of hematologic malignancies.
AID1500916Antiproliferative activity against human HL60 cells after 72 hrs by MTT assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-20, Volume: 139Puromycin based inhibitors of aminopeptidases for the potential treatment of hematologic malignancies.
AID1500913Toxicity in human HeLa cells expressing pCFE-GFP assessed as inhibition of GFP proetin synthesis at 25 uM incubated for 30 mins measured for 2 hrs by spectrophotometric method relative to control2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-20, Volume: 139Puromycin based inhibitors of aminopeptidases for the potential treatment of hematologic malignancies.
AID1500912Inhibition of recombinant human C-terminal His10-tagged APN (Lys69 to Lys967 residues) using Ala-AMC as substrate measured for 30 mins by fluorescence assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-20, Volume: 139Puromycin based inhibitors of aminopeptidases for the potential treatment of hematologic malignancies.
AID1500910Inhibition of recombinant human N-terminal His6-MBP-tagged PSA expressed in Escherichia coli BL21 STAR (DE3) using 4-Ala-MNA as substrate measured for 30 mins by thefluorescence assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-20, Volume: 139Puromycin based inhibitors of aminopeptidases for the potential treatment of hematologic malignancies.
AID1607848Inhibition of MMP8 (unknown origin) using QF-24 as substrate preincubated for 1 hr followed by substrate addition and measured at 1 min interval for 1 hr by fluorescence assay2019Journal of medicinal chemistry, 08-08, Volume: 62, Issue:15
Novel Human Aminopeptidase N Inhibitors: Discovery and Optimization of Subsite Binding Interactions.
AID1607846Inhibition of MMP2 (unknown origin) using QF-24 as substrate preincubated for 1 hr followed by substrate addition and measured at 1 min interval for 1 hr by fluorescence assay2019Journal of medicinal chemistry, 08-08, Volume: 62, Issue:15
Novel Human Aminopeptidase N Inhibitors: Discovery and Optimization of Subsite Binding Interactions.
AID1607850Inhibition of MMP7 (unknown origin) using QF-24 as substrate preincubated for 1 hr followed by substrate addition and measured at 1 min interval for 1 hr by fluorescence assay2019Journal of medicinal chemistry, 08-08, Volume: 62, Issue:15
Novel Human Aminopeptidase N Inhibitors: Discovery and Optimization of Subsite Binding Interactions.
AID1607849Inhibition of MMP13 (unknown origin) using QF-24 as substrate preincubated for 1 hr followed by substrate addition and measured at 1 min interval for 1 hr by fluorescence assay2019Journal of medicinal chemistry, 08-08, Volume: 62, Issue:15
Novel Human Aminopeptidase N Inhibitors: Discovery and Optimization of Subsite Binding Interactions.
AID1607843Inhibition of Plasmodium falciparum M1 aminopeptidase2019Journal of medicinal chemistry, 08-08, Volume: 62, Issue:15
Novel Human Aminopeptidase N Inhibitors: Discovery and Optimization of Subsite Binding Interactions.
AID1500914Cytotoxicity against African green monkey Vero cells assessed as reduction in cell proliferation after 72 hrs by MTT assay2017European journal of medicinal chemistry, Oct-20, Volume: 139Puromycin based inhibitors of aminopeptidases for the potential treatment of hematologic malignancies.
AID1607842Inhibition of soluble human APN ectodomain stably expressed in HEK293 GnTI(-) cells using H-Leu-NHMec as substrate preincubated for 10 mins followed by substrate addition and measured for 1 hr by spectrofluorimetric method2019Journal of medicinal chemistry, 08-08, Volume: 62, Issue:15
Novel Human Aminopeptidase N Inhibitors: Discovery and Optimization of Subsite Binding Interactions.
AID1296008Cytotoxic Profiling of Annotated Libraries Using Quantitative High-Throughput Screening2020SLAS discovery : advancing life sciences R & D, 01, Volume: 25, Issue:1
Cytotoxic Profiling of Annotated and Diverse Chemical Libraries Using Quantitative High-Throughput Screening.
AID1347115qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for NB-EBc1 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347108qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Rh41 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347086qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lymphocytic Choriomeningitis Arenaviruses (LCMV): LCMV Primary Screen - GLuc reporter signal2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID1347105qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for MG 63 (6-TG R) cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347094qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for BT-37 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347111qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for SK-N-MC cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347128qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for OHS-50 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347091qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for SJ-GBM2 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347096qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for U-2 OS cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347109qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for NB1643 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347123qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for Rh41 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347104qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for RD cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347112qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for BT-12 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347114qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for DAOY cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347121qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for control Hh wild type fibroblast cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347127qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for Saos-2 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347101qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for BT-12 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347116qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for SJ-GBM2 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1346987P-glycoprotein substrates identified in KB-8-5-11 adenocarcinoma cell line, qHTS therapeutic library screen2019Molecular pharmacology, 11, Volume: 96, Issue:5
A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
AID1347106qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for control Hh wild type fibroblast cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID686947qHTS for small molecule inhibitors of Yes1 kinase: Primary Screen2013Bioorganic & medicinal chemistry letters, Aug-01, Volume: 23, Issue:15
Identification of potent Yes1 kinase inhibitors using a library screening approach.
AID1508630Primary qHTS for small molecule stabilizers of the endoplasmic reticulum resident proteome: Secreted ER Calcium Modulated Protein (SERCaMP) assay2021Cell reports, 04-27, Volume: 35, Issue:4
A target-agnostic screen identifies approved drugs to stabilize the endoplasmic reticulum-resident proteome.
AID1347102qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Rh18 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347125qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for Rh18 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347103qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for OHS-50 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347095qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for NB-EBc1 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347119qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for MG 63 (6-TG R) cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347129qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for SK-N-SH cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347099qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for NB1643 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1745845Primary qHTS for Inhibitors of ATXN expression
AID1347100qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for LAN-5 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347154Primary screen GU AMC qHTS for Zika virus inhibitors2020Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 12-08, Volume: 117, Issue:49
Therapeutic candidates for the Zika virus identified by a high-throughput screen for Zika protease inhibitors.
AID1347122qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for U-2 OS cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1346986P-glycoprotein substrates identified in KB-3-1 adenocarcinoma cell line, qHTS therapeutic library screen2019Molecular pharmacology, 11, Volume: 96, Issue:5
A High-Throughput Screen of a Library of Therapeutics Identifies Cytotoxic Substrates of P-glycoprotein.
AID1347092qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for A673 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347098qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for SK-N-SH cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347089qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for TC32 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347118qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for TC32 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347117qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for BT-37 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347124qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for RD cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347107qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Rh30 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347090qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for DAOY cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347110qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for A673 cells)2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347083qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lassa (LASV) Arenavirus: Viability assay - alamar blue signal for LASV Primary Screen2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID1347113qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for LAN-5 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347126qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Confirmatory screen for Rh30 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347097qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for Saos-2 cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347093qHTS of pediatric cancer cell lines to identify multiple opportunities for drug repurposing: Primary screen for SK-N-MC cells2018Oncotarget, Jan-12, Volume: 9, Issue:4
Quantitative high-throughput phenotypic screening of pediatric cancer cell lines identifies multiple opportunities for drug repurposing.
AID1347082qHTS for Inhibitors of the Functional Ribonucleoprotein Complex (vRNP) of Lassa (LASV) Arenavirus: LASV Primary Screen - GLuc reporter signal2020Antiviral research, 01, Volume: 173A cell-based, infectious-free, platform to identify inhibitors of lassa virus ribonucleoprotein (vRNP) activity.
AID1347411qHTS to identify inhibitors of the type 1 interferon - major histocompatibility complex class I in skeletal muscle: primary screen against the NCATS Mechanism Interrogation Plate v5.0 (MIPE) Libary2020ACS chemical biology, 07-17, Volume: 15, Issue:7
High-Throughput Screening to Identify Inhibitors of the Type I Interferon-Major Histocompatibility Complex Class I Pathway in Skeletal Muscle.
[information is prepared from bioassay data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Research

Studies (33)

TimeframeStudies, This Drug (%)All Drugs %
pre-19900 (0.00)18.7374
1990's0 (0.00)18.2507
2000's3 (9.09)29.6817
2010's21 (63.64)24.3611
2020's9 (27.27)2.80
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Market Indicators

Research Demand Index: 26.17

According to the monthly volume, diversity, and competition of internet searches for this compound, as well the volume and growth of publications, there is estimated to be moderate demand-to-supply ratio for research on this compound.

MetricThis Compound (vs All)
Research Demand Index26.17 (24.57)
Research Supply Index3.71 (2.92)
Research Growth Index5.21 (4.65)
Search Engine Demand Index29.35 (26.88)
Search Engine Supply Index2.00 (0.95)

This Compound (26.17)

All Compounds (24.57)

Study Types

Publication TypeThis drug (%)All Drugs (%)
Trials7 (21.21%)5.53%
Reviews5 (15.15%)6.00%
Case Studies0 (0.00%)4.05%
Observational0 (0.00%)0.25%
Other21 (63.64%)84.16%
[information is prepared from research data collected from National Library of Medicine (NLM), extracted Dec-2023]

Clinical Trials (11)

Trial Overview

TrialPhaseEnrollmentStudy TypeStart DateStatus
A Phase II Study of Tosedostat in Combination With Either Cytarabine or Decitabine in Newly Diagnosed AML or High-Risk MDS [NCT01567059]Phase 234 participants (Actual)Interventional2012-05-31Completed
The TOPAZ Study: A Long-Term Extension Study in Elderly Subjects With Relapsed/Refractory Acute Myeloid Leukemia to Allow Continued Therapy With Tosedostat [NCT01180426]Phase 230 participants (Anticipated)Interventional2010-06-30Active, not recruiting
An Open-label, Randomized, Two-way Crossover Trial of the Effect of a High-Fat Meal on the Pharmacokinetics of Oral Tosedostat (CHR 2797) in Healthy Male Subjects [NCT01638442]Phase 118 participants (Actual)Interventional2012-06-30Completed
A Phase 1b Dose-escalation Study to Evaluate the Safety and Tolerability of the Addition of the Aminopeptidase Inhibitor CHR-2797 to Paclitaxel in Patients With Advanced or Refractory Tumours [NCT00737555]Phase 123 participants (Actual)Interventional2006-08-31Completed
A Phase I Study to Evaluate the Safety and Tolerability, of the Aminopeptidase Inhibitor, CHR-2797, in Patients With Advanced Tumours [NCT00692354]Phase 141 participants (Actual)Interventional2004-10-31Completed
A Phase I-II Study to Evaluate the Safety, Tolerability and Anti-Disease Activity of the Aminopeptidase Inhibitor, CHR-2797, in Elderly and/or Treatment Refractory Patients With Acute Myeloid Leukemia or Multiple Myeloma [NCT00689000]Phase 1/Phase 257 participants (Actual)Interventional2006-05-31Completed
The OPAL Study: A Phase II Study to Evaluate the Efficacy, Safety and Tolerability of Tosedostat (CHR-2797) in Elderly Subjects With Treatment Refractory or Relapsed Acute Myeloid Leukemia [NCT00780598]Phase 276 participants (Actual)Interventional2009-10-31Completed
A Phase I-II, Multicenter, Open-label Trial of Co-administered CHR-2797 and Erlotinib in Patients With Locally Advanced or Metastatic Non-small Cell Lung Cancer [NCT00522938]Phase 1/Phase 22 participants (Actual)Interventional2007-12-31Terminated(stopped due to Very poor recruitment of patients to the study)
Phase I/II Study Combining Tosedostat With Capecitabine in Patients With Metastatic Pancreatic Adenocarcinoma [NCT02352831]Phase 1/Phase 216 participants (Actual)Interventional2015-08-31Terminated(stopped due to Insufficient funding and drug supply from manufacturer)
Phase I/II Study of Cytarabine or 5-Azacitidine Combined With Tosedostat to Evaluate the Safety and Tolerability in Older Patients With Acute Myeloid Leukemia (AML) or High Risk MDS [NCT01636609]Phase 118 participants (Actual)Interventional2012-11-20Terminated(stopped due to In 2013 the FDA put a temporary hold on the trial and the Phase II portion of this study was cancelled.)
Phase II Clinical Study of the Clinical Efficacy and Safety of Tosedostat in Atients With Myelodysplastic Syndromes (MDS) After Failure of Hypomethylating Agent-Based Therapy [NCT02452346]Phase 212 participants (Actual)Interventional2015-03-20Completed
[information is prepared from clinicaltrials.gov, extracted Sep-2024]

Trial Outcomes

TrialOutcome
NCT02352831 (7) [back to overview]Number of Participants With a CA19-9 Response
NCT02352831 (7) [back to overview]Overall Response Rate (ORR)
NCT02352831 (7) [back to overview]Overall Survival Rate (OS)
NCT02352831 (7) [back to overview]Phase I Only: Number of Participants Who Experience Dose-limiting Toxicities (DLTs)
NCT02352831 (7) [back to overview]Phase I Only: Recommended Phase II Dose of Tosedostat
NCT02352831 (7) [back to overview]Progression-free Survival (PFS) Rate
NCT02352831 (7) [back to overview]Time-to-progression (TTP)
NCT02452346 (1) [back to overview]Over All Survival

Number of Participants With a CA19-9 Response

"CA19-9 is a tumor marker that is used in the management of pancreatic cancer. Rising CA19-9 levels may mean the tumor is growing and decreasing CA19-9 levels may mean the tumor is shrinking or the amount of cancer in the body is decreasing~A CA19-9 response means that the tumor marker has decreased over baseline (before treatment started) levels" (NCT02352831)
Timeframe: Completion of treatment (median treatment length 81.50 days (28.00-346.00)

InterventionParticipants (Count of Participants)
Phase I (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)6
Phase II (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)10

[back to top]

Overall Response Rate (ORR)

"ORR = Complete response + partial response~Target lesions~Complete Response (CR): Disappearance of all target lesions. Any pathological lymph nodes (whether target or non-target) must have reduction in short axis to <10 mm.~Partial Response (PR): At least a 30% decrease in the sum of the diameters of target lesions, taking as reference the baseline sum diameters.~Non target lesions *Complete Response (CR): Disappearance of all non-target lesions and normalization of tumor marker level. All lymph nodes must be non-pathological in size (<10 mm short axis)." (NCT02352831)
Timeframe: Up to 18 months

InterventionParticipants (Count of Participants)
Phase I (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)0
Phase II (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)0

[back to top]

Overall Survival Rate (OS)

(NCT02352831)
Timeframe: Up to 1 year from completion of treatment (median treatment length 81.50 days (28.00-346.00)

InterventionParticipants (Count of Participants)
Phase I (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)3
Phase II (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)2
Phase I and Phase II (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)5

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Phase I Only: Number of Participants Who Experience Dose-limiting Toxicities (DLTs)

"Possibly/probably/definitely related to study treatment in 1st cycle (cyc)~*Grade (Gr) 4 neutropenia >7 day, Febrile neutropenia of any duration with temperature ≥ 38.5 °C, Gr 4 anemia requires transfusion therapy on more than 2 occasions in 7 days, Gr 4 thrombocytopenia~Possibly/probably/definitely related gr. 3/4 non-hematologic toxicity that occurs 1st cyc with the following EXCEPTIONS:~Gr 3 nausea/vomiting/diarrhea/anorexia <72 hours that returns to Gr 1 prior to the start of cyc 2, Gr 3 hand-foot syndrome will only be considered a DLT for patients who have received 1 week of supportive care treatment with no improvement, Gr 3 fatigue that returns to Gr 1 prior to the start of cyc 2, Gr 3 flu-like symptoms <72 hours that returns to Gr 1 prior to start of cyc 2, Gr 3 arthralgia or myalgias <72 hours that return to Gr 1 prior to the start of cyc 2, Gr 3 potassium/phosphorus/magnesium that is asymptomatic or of non-clinical significance <72 hours, Gr 3 hypoalbuminemia" (NCT02352831)
Timeframe: Completion of cycle 1 of all participants in Phase I portion of study (approximately 14 months)

InterventionParticipants (Count of Participants)
Phase I (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)1

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Progression-free Survival (PFS) Rate

"PFS is defined as the duration of time from start of treatment to time of progression or death, whichever occurs first.~Progressive disease (PD)~Target lesions: At least a 20% increase in the sum of the diameters of target lesions, taking as reference the smallest sum on study (this includes the baseline sum if that is the smallest on study). In addition to the relative increase of 20%, the sum must also demonstrate an absolute increase of at least 5 mm. (Note: the appearance of one or more new lesions is also considered progressions).~Non target lesions: Appearance of one or more new lesions and/or unequivocal progression of existing non-target lesions. Unequivocal progression should not normally trump target lesion status. It must be representative of overall disease status change, not a single lesion increase." (NCT02352831)
Timeframe: 3 months

InterventionParticipants (Count of Participants)
Phase I (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)3
Phase II (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)8
Phase I and Phase II Combined11

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Time-to-progression (TTP)

"-Progressive disease (PD)~Target lesions: At least a 20% increase in the sum of the diameters of target lesions, taking as reference the smallest sum on study (this includes the baseline sum if that is the smallest on study). In addition to the relative increase of 20%, the sum must also demonstrate an absolute increase of at least 5 mm. (Note: the appearance of one or more new lesions is also considered progressions).~Non target lesions: Appearance of one or more new lesions and/or unequivocal progression of existing non-target lesions. Unequivocal progression should not normally trump target lesion status. It must be representative of overall disease status change, not a single lesion increase" (NCT02352831)
Timeframe: Up to 24 months

Interventiondays (Median)
Phase I (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)210.50
Phase II (Tosedostat + Capecitabine)94.50

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Over All Survival

Survival following treatment to the date of death, assessed up to a period of 3-4 years. (NCT02452346)
Timeframe: from start of treatment until death, assessed up to a period of 3-4 years.

Interventionmonths (Median)
All Patients15.9

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