Azacitidine

Azacitidine
Azacitidine
Systematic (IUPAC) name
4-amino-1-β-D-ribofuranosyl-1,3,5-triazin-2(1H)-one
Clinical data
Trade names Vidaza
AHFS/Drugs.com monograph
MedlinePlus a607068
Pregnancy cat. D (US), X (Aus)
Legal status  ?
Routes SubQ, IV
Pharmacokinetic data
Metabolism possible hepatic metabolism, mostly urinary excretion
Half-life 4 hr. [1]
Identifiers
CAS number 320-67-2 YesY
ATC code L01BC07 [2]
PubChem CID 9444
DrugBank APRD00809
ChemSpider 9072 YesY
UNII M801H13NRU YesY
KEGG D03021 YesY
ChEBI CHEBI:2038 YesY
ChEMBL CHEMBL1489 YesY
Synonyms 5-azacytidine
Chemical data
Formula C8H12N4O5 
Mol. mass 244.205 g/mol
SMILES eMolecules & PubChem
 N(what is this?)  (verify)

Azacitidine (INN) or 5-azacytidine, sold under the trade name Vidaza, is a chemical analogue of cytidine, a nucleoside present in DNA and RNA. Azacitidine and its deoxy derivative, decitabine (also known as 5-aza-2′deoxycytidine), are used in the treatment of myelodysplastic syndrome. Both drugs were first synthesized in Czechoslovakia as potential chemotherapeutic agents for cancer.[3]

Azacitidine has also been used as an experimental treatment in clinical trials involving cases of acute myeloid leukemia, where the patient has suffered more than one relapse- in these cases, standard chemotherapy, hematopoietic stem cell transplantation, and other mainline treatments have failed.

Contents

Uses

Azacitidine is mainly used in the treatment of myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), for which it received approval by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration on May 19, 2004; it is marketed as Vidaza.[4] In a randomized controlled trial comparing azacitidine to supportive treatment of MDS, around 16% of people receiving the drug had a complete or partial response—blood cell counts and bone marrow morphology returning to normal—and 2/3 patients who required blood transfusions before the study no longer needed them after receiving azacitidine.[5]

It can also be used in vitro to remove methyl groups from DNA. This may weaken the effects of gene silencing mechanisms that occurred prior to the methylation. Methylation events are therefore believed to secure the DNA in a silenced state. Demethylation may reduce the stability of silencing signals and thus confer relative gene activation.[6]

Mechanism of action

Methyltransferases in the presence of azacitidine incorporate it into DNA during replication and into RNA during transcription in the cell. Azacitidine acts as a false substrate and potent inhibitor of methyltransferases leading to reduction of DNA methylation — affecting the way cell regulation proteins are able to bind to the DNA/RNA substrate. Inhibition of DNA methylation occurs through the formation of stable complexes between the molecule and with DNA methyltransferases, thereby saturating cell methylation machinery.

See also

  • DNA methylation, the phenomenon that azacitidine is known to interfere with

References

  1. ^ Deglin, Judith, & Vallerand, April. (2009). Davis's drug guide for nurses. Philadelphia: F.A. Davis Company. pg. 204-206
  2. ^ WHO International Working Group for Drug Statistics Methodology (August 27, 2008). "ATC/DDD Classification (FINAL): New ATC 5th level codes". WHO Collaborating Centre for Drug Statistics Methodology. Archived from the original on 2008-05-06. http://web.archive.org/web/20080506023243/http://www.whocc.no/atcddd/new_atc_ddd.html#ATCDDD_FINAL. Retrieved 2008-09-05. 
  3. ^ Cihák A (1974). "Biological effects of 5-azacytidine in eukaryotes". Oncology 30 (5): 405–22. doi:10.1159/000224981. PMID 4142650. 
  4. ^ Vidaza web site.
  5. ^ Kaminskas E, Farrell AT, Wang Y-C, Sridhara R, Pazdur R (2005). "FDA Drug Approval Summary: Azacitidine (5-azacytidine, Vidaza) for Injectable Suspension". The Oncologist 10 (3): 176–82. doi:10.1634/theoncologist.10-3-176. PMID 15793220. 
  6. ^ Whitelaw E and Garrick D (2005), The Epigenome, Chapter 7, In: Mammalian Genomics, Ed: Ruvinsky A & Marshall Graves JA, CABI Publishing, Wallingford, UK, ISBN 0851999107.

External links