TY - JOUR
T1 - Alkylating potential of oxetanes
AU - Gómez-Bombarelli, Rafael
AU - Palma, Bernardo Brito
AU - Martins, Célia
AU - Kranendonk, Michel
AU - Rodrigues, Antonio S.
AU - Calle, Emilio
AU - Rueff, José
AU - Casado, Julio
PY - 2010/7/19
Y1 - 2010/7/19
N2 - Small, highly strained heterocycles are archetypical alkylating agents (oxiranes, β-lactones, aziridinium, and thiirinium ions). Oxetanes, which are tetragonal ethers, are higher homologues of oxiranes and reduced counterparts of β-lactones, and would therefore be expected to be active alkylating agents. Oxetanes are widely used in the manufacture of polymers, especially in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), and are present, as a substructure, in compounds such as the widely used antimitotic taxol. Whereas the results of animal tests suggest that trimethylene oxide (TMO), the parent compound, and β,β-dimethyloxetane (DMOX) are active carcinogens at the site of injection, no studies have explored the alkylating ability and genotoxicity of oxetanes. This work addresses the issue using a mixed methodology: a kinetic study of the alkylation reaction of 4-(p-nitrobenzyl) pyridine (NBP), a trap for alkylating agents with nucleophilicity similar to that of DNA bases, by three oxetanes (TMO, DMOX, and methyloxetanemethanol), and a mutagenicity, genotoxicity, and cell viability study (Salmonella microsome test, BTC E. coli test, alkaline comet assay, and MTT assay). The results suggest either that oxetanes lack genotoxic capacity or that their mode of action is very different from that of epoxides and β-lactones.
AB - Small, highly strained heterocycles are archetypical alkylating agents (oxiranes, β-lactones, aziridinium, and thiirinium ions). Oxetanes, which are tetragonal ethers, are higher homologues of oxiranes and reduced counterparts of β-lactones, and would therefore be expected to be active alkylating agents. Oxetanes are widely used in the manufacture of polymers, especially in organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), and are present, as a substructure, in compounds such as the widely used antimitotic taxol. Whereas the results of animal tests suggest that trimethylene oxide (TMO), the parent compound, and β,β-dimethyloxetane (DMOX) are active carcinogens at the site of injection, no studies have explored the alkylating ability and genotoxicity of oxetanes. This work addresses the issue using a mixed methodology: a kinetic study of the alkylation reaction of 4-(p-nitrobenzyl) pyridine (NBP), a trap for alkylating agents with nucleophilicity similar to that of DNA bases, by three oxetanes (TMO, DMOX, and methyloxetanemethanol), and a mutagenicity, genotoxicity, and cell viability study (Salmonella microsome test, BTC E. coli test, alkaline comet assay, and MTT assay). The results suggest either that oxetanes lack genotoxic capacity or that their mode of action is very different from that of epoxides and β-lactones.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=77955359925&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1021/tx100153w
DO - 10.1021/tx100153w
M3 - Article
C2 - 20550097
AN - SCOPUS:77955359925
SN - 0893-228X
VL - 23
SP - 1275
EP - 1281
JO - Chemical Research in Toxicology
JF - Chemical Research in Toxicology
IS - 7
ER -