- Eriochrome Black T, structurally related to suramin, inhibits angiogenesis and tumor growth in vivo.
Eriochrome Black T, structurally related to suramin, inhibits angiogenesis and tumor growth in vivo.
The polyanionic species suramin is a potential anti-cancer agent of narrow therapeutic index. Among other pharmacological characteristics, suramin is an inhibitor of angiogenesis. We have targeted its angiostatic properties as part of a program to discover less toxic analogs. From screening a series of commercially available compounds, structurally related to suramin and containing a sulfonic acid substituted naphthylamine moiety, we discovered a new lead, Eriochrome Black T (EBT). EBT is a novel inhibitor of angiogenesis, more potent and less toxic than suramin in the chick chorioallantoic membrane assay. EBT was more active than suramin in inhibiting endothelial cell proliferation in primary culture and in inhibiting proliferation of three tumor cell lines, A431, L1210 and M5076 (IC50 10-100 microM). Cell cycle studies on the A431 line showed that both EBT and suramin caused an accumulation of cells in the S phase, EBT being 10-fold more potent. We suggest that this cell cycle perturbation is linked to inhibition of topoisomerase II catalytic activity. EBT was found to be a moderate but significant inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases (10 microM range), more efficient than suramin. In a s.c. M5076 sarcoma model in mice, EBT had similar efficacy to suramin both by the i.p. or s.c. route and was moreover better tolerated. Combined pharmacological results show that EBT compared favorably with suramin in all assays, and that in ovo and in vivo, EBT is an analog of suramin with diminished toxicity.