Heptamidine
Names
[ CAS No. ]:
94345-47-8
[ Name ]:
Heptamidine
Biological Activity
[Description]:
Heptamidine (SBi4211) is a potent Pentamidine-related inhibitor of the calcium-binding protein S100B (Kd=6.9 μM), selectively kills melanoma cells with S100B over those without S100B[1]. Heptamidine is a useful tool for the investigation of Myotonic dystrophy (DM)[2].
[Related Catalog]:
[Target]
Kd: 6.9 μM (calcium-binding protein S100B)[1]
[In Vitro]
Heptamidine is a Pentamidine-S100B complex, two molecules of pentamidine bind per monomer of S100B, which performs to be an inhibitor for S100B[1]. Heptamidine (20 μM) does not decrease CUG levels significantly when compares to Propamidine and Pentamidine, and exhibits cytotoxic at concentrations above 17.5 μM in HeLa cells expressing 960 CUG repeats[2]. Heptamidine rescues mis-splicing of minigene reporters in a HeLa cell DM1 model with an EC50 value of 15 μM[2].
[In Vivo]
Heptamidine (intraperitoneal injection; 20 or 30 mg/kg; 7 days) causes a dose-dependent reduction of exon 7a inclusion in HSALR mice, returning to wild type levels (6±1%) when at 20 mg/kg dose, the myotonia is reduced from grade 3 to grade 1 (occasional myotonic discharge) or grade 0 at both 20 or 30 mg/kg[2]. Animal Model: Homozygous HSALR transgenic mice in line 20b (FVB inbred background) with a Myotonic dystrophy (DM) mouse model[2] Dosage: 20 or 30 mg/kg Administration: Intraperitoneal injection; 7 days; once daily Result: Reversed splicing defects and rescues myotonia in a DM mouse model.
[References]
Chemical & Physical Properties
[ Molecular Formula ]:
C21H28N4O2
[ Molecular Weight ]:
368.47