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Dive into the research topics where Mubashir J. Mintoo is active.

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Featured researches published by Mubashir J. Mintoo.


Tumor Biology | 2016

A novel colchicine-based microtubule inhibitor exhibits potent antitumor activity by inducing mitochondrial mediated apoptosis in MIA PaCa-2 pancreatic cancer cells.

Ashok Kumar; Baljinder Singh; Girish Mahajan; Parduman Raj Sharma; Sandip B. Bharate; Mubashir J. Mintoo; Dilip M. Mondhe

Colchicine, an antimitotic alkaloid isolated from Colchicum autumnale, is a classical drug for treatment of gout and familial Mediterranean fever. It causes antiproliferative effects through the inhibition of microtubule formation, which leads to mitotic arrest and cell death by apoptosis. Here, we report that a novel colchicine analog, 4o (N-[(7S)-1,2,3-trimethoxy-9-oxo-10-[3-(trifluoromethyl)-4-chlorophenylamino]-5,6,7,9-tetrahydrobenzo[a]heptalen-7-yl]acetamide), which exhibited potent anticancer activities both in vitro and in vivo. In this study, 4o with excellent pharmacokinetic profile and no P-gp induction liability displayed strong inhibition of proliferation against various human cancer cell lines. However, pancreatic cancer cell line MIA PaCa-2 was found to be more sensitive towards 4o and showed strong inhibition in concentration and time-dependent manner. By increasing intracellular reactive oxygen species (ROS) levels, 4o induced endoplasmic reticular stress and mitochondrial dysfunction in MIA PaCa-2 cells. Blockage of ROS production reversed 4o-induced endoplasmic reticulum (ER) stress, calcium release, and cell death. More importantly, it revealed that increased ROS generation might be an effective strategy in treating human pancreatic cancer. Further 4o treatment induced mitotic arrest, altered the expression of cell cycle-associated proteins, and disrupted the microtubules in MIA PaCa-2 cells. 4o treatment caused loss of mitochondrial membrane potential, cytochrome c release, upregulation of Bax, downregulation of Bcl-2, and cleavage of caspase-3, thereby showing activation of mitochondrial mediated apoptosis. The in vivo anticancer activity of the compound was studied using sarcoma-180 (ascitic) and leukemia (P388 lymphocytic and L1210 lymphoid) models in mice and showed promising antitumor activity with the least toxicity unlike colchicine. Such studies have hitherto not been reported. Taken together, these findings highlighted that 4o, a potent derivative of colchicine, causes tumor regression with reduced toxicity and provides a novel anticancer candidate for the therapeutic use.


Chemico-Biological Interactions | 2017

A marine sponge alkaloid derivative 4-chloro fascaplysin inhibits tumor growth and VEGF mediated angiogenesis by disrupting PI3K/Akt/mTOR signaling cascade

Sonia Sharma; Santosh Guru; Sudhakar Manda; Ashok Kumar; Mubashir J. Mintoo; Venna Deva Prasad; Parduman Raj Sharma; Dilip M. Mondhe; Sandip B. Bharate; Shashi Bhushan

Tumor angiogenesis and PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway are two major molecular objectives for the treatment and management of breast cancer. Here we first time report the molecular mechanism of a marine sponge alkaloid derivative 4-chloro fascapysin (4-CF) for its anticancer and antiangiogenesis potential. It simultaneously targets multiple cancer and angiogenesis dynamics, such as proliferation, chemotaxis cell migration, and invasion, growth factors signaling cascade, autophagy and apoptosis in HUVEC and MDAMB-231 breast cancer cells. It inhibited the VEGF mediated microvessel sprouting and blood vessel formation in the matrigel plug of C57/BL6J mice. It inhibits the tumor growth in ET (solid) mouse tumor model. It significantly inhibited cell survival through PI3K/Akt/mTOR pathway, with attendant effects on key pro-angiogenesis factors like HIF-1α, eNOS and MMP-2/9. The cytotoxicity of 4-CF was reversed by co-treatment with the VEGF and Akt inhibitors sunitinib and perifosine, respectively or by the addition of neutralizing VEGF antibodies. The apoptotic potential of 4-CF was through mitochondrial dependent as illustrated through loss of mitochondrial membrane potential. The safety profile of 4-CF was acceptable as it exhibits five times high cytotoxic IC50 value in normal cells as well as no apparent toxicities in experimental tumor mice at therapeutic doses.


Biomedicine & Pharmacotherapy | 2017

Development and characterization of hyaluronic acid modified PLGA based nanoparticles for improved efficacy of cisplatin in solid tumor

Noor Alam; Mytre Koul; Mubashir J. Mintoo; Vaibhav Khare; Rahul Gupta; Neha Rawat; Parduman Raj Sharma; Shashank K. Singh; Dilip M. Mondhe; Prem N. Gupta

Cisplatin is a potent and widely used chemotherapeutic agent to treat a variety of tumors. However, its clinical use is associated with undesirable side effects and acquired resistance to cisplatin. In this study, cisplatin loaded hyaluronic acid (HA) functionalized poly (lactic-co-glycolic acid)-poly (ethylene glycol) nanoparticles (CP-HA-PLGA-PEG-NPs) were fabricated using double emulsion solvent evaporation method to target CD44 receptor expressed on cancerous cells. The developed nanoconstructs were characterized for various in vitro parameters, including size distribution, zeta potential, morphology, drug loading and in vitro release. The HA content on the HA-PLGA-PEG-NPs was quantified by a turbidimetric method. The in vitro anticancer study in human ovarian cancer (SKOV-3) cells showed significantly (p<0.05) higher cytotoxicity of CP-HA-PLGA-PEG NPs as compared to free cisplatin and non-targeted nanoparticles (CP-PLGA-PEG NPs). Further, laser scanning confocal microscopy revealed that there was enhanced cellular uptake of HA-PLGA-PEG NPs in CD44-over expressing ovarian cancer cell line (SKOV-3). The in vivo antitumor activity of CP-HA-PLGA-PEG-NPs was significantly (p<0.05) higher than free cisplatin and CP-PLGA-PEG-NPs in Ehrlich tumor (solid) bearing mice. The results demonstrated the potential of target specific nanoconstruct of cisplatin in the improved cancer chemotherapy.


International Journal of Pharmaceutics | 2017

Development and evaluation of long-circulating nanoparticles loaded with betulinic acid for improved anti-tumor efficacy

Ankit Saneja; Robin Kumar; Amarinder Singh; Ravindra Dhar Dubey; Mubashir J. Mintoo; Gurdarshan Singh; Dilip M. Mondhe; Amulya K. Panda; Prem N. Gupta

The clinical application of betulinic acid (BA), a natural pentacyclic triterpenoid with promising antitumor activity, is hampered due to its extremely poor water solubility and relatively short half-life in the systemic circulation. In order to address these issues, herein, we developed betulinic acid loaded polylactide-co-glycolide- monomethoxy polyethylene glycol nanoparticles (PLGA-mPEG NPs). The PLGA-mPEG co-polymer was synthesized and characterized using NMR and FT-IR. BA loaded PLGA-mPEG NPs were prepared by an emulsion solvent evaporation method. The developed nanoparticles had a desirable particle size (∼147nm) and exhibited uniform spherical shape under transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The PLGA-mPEG NPs were able to decrease the uptake by macrophages (i.e. J774A.1 and Raw 264.7 cells) as compared to PLGA nanoparticles. In vitro cytotoxicity in MCF7 and PANC-1 cells demonstrated enhanced cytotoxicity of BA loaded PLGA-mPEG NPs as compared to free BA. The cellular uptake study in both the cell lines demonstrated time dependent uptake behavior. The enhanced cytotoxicity of BA NPs was also supported by increased cellular apoptosis, mitochondrial membrane potential loss, generation of high reactive oxygen species (ROS) and cell cycle arrest. Further, intravenous pharmacokinetics study revealed that BA loaded PLGA-mPEG NPs could prolong the circulation of BA and remarkably enhance half-life by ∼7.21 folds. Consequently, in vivo studies in Ehrlich tumor (solid) model following intravenous administration demonstrated superior antitumor efficacy of BA NPs as compared to native BA. Moreover, BA NPs treated Ehrlich tumor mice demonstrated no biochemical, hematological and histological toxicities. These findings collectively indicated that the BA loaded PLGA-mPEG NPs might serve as a promising nanocarrier for improved therapeutic efficacy of betulinic acid.


Molecular Carcinogenesis | 2016

A novel PI3K axis selective molecule exhibits potent tumor inhibition in colorectal carcinogenesis

Aashiq Hussain; Asif Khurshid Qazi; Nagaraju Mupparapu; Ashok Kumar; Mubashir J. Mintoo; Girish Mahajan; Parduman Raj Sharma; Shashank K. Singh; Sandip B. Bharate; Mohmmad Afzal Zargar; Qazi Naveed Ahmed; Dilip M. Mondhe; Ram A. Vishwakarma; Abid Hamid

Phosphatidylinositol‐3‐kinase (PI3K) pathway deregulation is responsible for initiation, chemo‐resistance, and poor prognosis of colorectal cancer (CRC). Therefore, PI3K pathway inhibition can provide a plausible way of attaining CRC treatment. We report PI3K target specific synthesis and selection of a potent molecule, that is, 2,3‐dihydro‐2‐(naphthalene‐1‐yl) quinazolin‐4(1H)‐one (DHNQ) from quinazolinone series based on the structural activity relationship after evaluation in diverse cancers. This molecule inhibited the PI3K enzyme activity and transcriptional as well as translational expression levels in colorectal cancer (CRC) models. This was associated with subsequent decrease in phosphorylation of its downstream effector proteins, that is, p‐Akt(Ser‐473) and p‐mTORC1(Ser‐2448) and decreased ERK signaling. Furthermore, DHNQ decreased expression of cyclins that caused G1 arrest and decreased Bcl‐2/Bax ratio after mitochondrial membrane potential loss, reactive oxygen species generation, and an increase in cytosolic Ca2+ loads that is responsible for the decreased CRC cell proliferation and survival. These biochemical changes triggered apoptotic cell death with altered autophagic Beclin‐1 and LC3β expression. It seemed that the PI3K‐Akt signaling regulated apoptosis and autophagy through different mechanisms but mTORC1 mediated autophagy appeared not to be involved in the cell death induction by DHNQ. The molecule also showed significant anticancer efficacy in in vivo tumor models without any mortality indicating its non‐toxic nature with possible clinical significance. Overall, the selective elucidation of DHNQ molecular mechanism will provide the possible strategies for the clinical development in CRC that may respond to this specific, potent and novel P13K inhibitor.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Exploring Derivatives of Quinazoline Alkaloid l-Vasicine as Cap Groups in the Design and Biological Mechanistic Evaluation of Novel Antitumor Histone Deacetylase Inhibitors

Mudassier Ahmad; Mushtaq A. Aga; Javeed Ahmad Bhat; Brijesh Kumar; Abdul Rouf; Neena Capalash; Mubashir J. Mintoo; Ashok Kumar; Priya Mahajan; Dilip M. Mondhe; Amit Nargotra; Parduman Raj Sharma; Mohmmad Afzal Zargar; Ram A. Vishwakarma; Bhahwal Ali Shah; Subhash C. Taneja; Abid Hamid

l-Vasicine is a quinazoline alkaloid with an electron dense ring and additional functionalities in its structure. Employing target oriented synthesis (TOS) based on in silico studies, molecules with significant docking scores containing different derivatives of l-vasicine as caps were synthesized. Interestingly, one molecule, i.e., 4a, which contained 3-hyroxypyrrolidine as a cap group and a six carbon long aliphatic chain as a linker was found to inhibit HDACs. 4a showed more specificity toward class I HDAC isoforms. Also 4a was found to be less cytotoxic toward normal cell lines as compared to cancer cell lines. 4a inhibited cancer cell growth and induced cell death by various mechanisms. However, 4a was found to induce cell death independent of ROS generation, and unlike many natural product based HDAC inhibitors, 4a was found to be nontoxic under in vivo conditions. Importantly, we for the first time report the possibility of using a 3-hydroxypyrrolidine cap for the synthesis of HDAC inhibitors with good potency.


Archive | 2018

Antitumour and Acute Toxicity Studies of 4-(pyridin-4-yl)-6-(thiophen-2-yl)pyrimidin-2(1H)-one Against Ehrlich Ascites Carcinoma and Sarcoma-180

Dinesh Kumar; Pooja Sharma; Kunal Nepali; Girish Mahajan; Mubashir J. Mintoo; Amarinder Singh; Dilip Manikaro Mondhe; Gurdarshan Singh; Subheet Jain; Girish Kumar Gupta; Fidele Ntie-Kang

In an effort to discover an effective and selective antitumour agent, synthesis and anti-cancer potential of 4-(pyridin-4-yl)-6-(thiophen-2-yl)pyrimidin-2(1H)-one (SK-25), which has been reported earlier by us with significant cytotoxicity towards MiaPaCa-2 malignant cells, with an IC50 value of 1.95 μM and was found to instigate apoptosis. In the present study, the antitumour efficacy of SK-25 was investigated on Ehrlich ascites tumour (solid), Sarcoma 180 (solid) tumour and Ehrlich ascites carcinoma. The compound was found to inhibit tumour development by 94.71% in Ehrlich ascites carcinoma (EAC), 59.06% in Ehrlich tumour (ET, solid) and 45.68% in Sarcoma-180 (solid) at 30 mg/kg dose. Additionally, SK-25 was established to be non-toxic at a maximum tolerated dose of 1000 mg/kg in acute oral toxicity in Swiss-albino mice. Computer-based predictions also show that the compounds could have an interesting DMPK profile. The current study provides insight for further investigation of the antitumour potential of the molecule. keywords: antitumour; cancer; chalcone; DMPK; in silico; in vivo Preprints (www.preprints.org) | NOT PEER-REVIEWED | Posted: 23 January 2018 doi:10.20944/preprints201801.0214.v1


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2018

Discovery and Preclinical Development of IIIM-290, an Orally Active Potent Cyclin-Dependent Kinase Inhibitor

Sandip B. Bharate; Vikas Kumar; Shreyans K. Jain; Mubashir J. Mintoo; Santosh Kumar Guru; Vijay K. Nuthakki; Mohit Sharma; Sonali S. Bharate; Sumit G. Gandhi; Dilip M. Mondhe; Shashi Bhushan; Ram A. Vishwakarma

Rohitukine (1), a chromone alkaloid isolated from Indian medicinal plant Dysoxylum binectariferum, has inspired the discovery of flavopiridol and riviciclib, both of which are bioavailable only via intravenous route. With the objective to address the oral bioavailability issue of this scaffold, four series of rohitukine derivatives were prepared and screened for Cdk inhibition and cellular antiproliferative activity. The 2,6-dichloro-styryl derivative IIIM-290 (11d) showed strong inhibition of Cdk-9/T1 (IC50 1.9 nM) kinase and Molt-4/MIAPaCa-2 cell growth (GI50 < 1.0 μM) and was found to be highly selective for cancer cells over normal fibroblast cells. It inhibited the cell growth of MIAPaCa-2 cells via caspase-dependent apoptosis. It achieved 71% oral bioavailability with in vivo efficacy in pancreatic, colon, and leukemia xenografts at 50 mg/kg, po. It did not have CYP/efflux-pump liability, was not mutagenic/genotoxic or cardiotoxic, and was metabolically stable. The preclinical data presented herein indicates the potential of 11d for advancement in clinical studies.


Heliyon | 2018

Antitumour, acute toxicity and molecular modeling studies of 4-(pyridin-4-yl)-6-(thiophen-2-yl) pyrimidin-2(1H)-one against Ehrlich ascites carcinoma and sarcoma-180

Dinesh Kumar; Pooja Sharma; Kunal Nepali; Girish Mahajan; Mubashir J. Mintoo; Amarinder Singh; G. Singh; Dilip M. Mondhe; Gurdarshan Singh; Subheet Kumar Jain; Girish Kumar Gupta; Fidele Ntie-Kang

In an effort to discover an effective and selective antitumour agent, synthesis and anti-cancer potential of 4-(pyridin-4-yl)-6-(thiophen-2-yl) pyrimidin-2(1H)-one (SK-25), which has been reported earlier by us with significant cytotoxicity towards MiaPaCa-2 malignant cells, with an IC50 value of 1.95 μM and was found to instigate apoptosis. In the present study, the antitumour efficacy of SK-25 was investigated on Ehrlich ascites tumour (EAT, solid), Sarcoma 180 (solid) tumour and Ehrlich ascites carcinoma. The compound was found to inhibit tumour development by 94.71% in Ehrlich ascites carcinoma (EAC), 59.06% in Ehrlich tumour (ET, solid) and 45.68% in Sarcoma-180 (solid) at 30 mg/kg dose. Additionally, SK-25 was established to be non-toxic at a maximum tolerated dose of 1000 mg/kg in acute oral toxicity in Swiss-albino mice. Computer-based predictions also show that the compounds could have an interesting DMPK profile since all 51 computed physicochemical parameters fall within the recommended range for 95% of known drugs. The current study provides insight for further investigation of the antitumour potential of the molecule.


Journal of Medicinal Chemistry | 2017

Design of Novel 3-Pyrimidinylazaindole CDK2/9 Inhibitors with Potent In Vitro and In Vivo Antitumor Efficacy in a Triple-Negative Breast Cancer Model

Umed Singh; Gousia Chashoo; Sameer U. Khan; Priya Mahajan; Amit Nargotra; Girish Mahajan; Amarinder Singh; Anjna Sharma; Mubashir J. Mintoo; Santosh Kumar Guru; Hariprasad Aruri; Thanusha Thatikonda; Promod Kumar Sahu; Pankaj Chibber; Vikas Kumar; Sameer Ahmad Mir; Sonali S. Bharate; Sreedhar Madishetti; Utpal Nandi; Gurdarshan Singh; Dilip M. Mondhe; Shashi Bhushan; Fayaz Malik; Serge Mignani; Ram A. Vishwakarma; Parvinder Pal Singh

In the present study, a novel series of 3-pyrimidinylazaindoles were designed and synthesized using a bioinformatics strategy as cyclin-dependent kinases CDK2 and CDK9 inhibitors, which play critical roles in the cell cycle control and regulation of cell transcription. The present approach gives new dimensions to the existing SAR and opens a new opportunity for the lead optimizations from comparatively inexpensive starting materials. The study led to the identification of the alternative lead candidate 4ab with a nanomolar potency against CDK2 and CDK9 and potent antiproliferative activities against a panel of tested tumor cell lines along with a better safety ratio of ∼33 in comparison to reported leads. In addition, the identified lead 4ab demonstrated a good solubility and an acceptable in vivo PK profile. The identified lead 4ab showed an in vivo efficacy in mouse triple-negative breast cancer (TNBC) syngeneic models with a TGI (tumor growth inhibition) of 90% without any mortality growth inhibition in comparison to reported leads.

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Dilip M. Mondhe

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Girish Mahajan

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Parduman Raj Sharma

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Ram A. Vishwakarma

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Sandip B. Bharate

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Amarinder Singh

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Ashok Kumar

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Gurdarshan Singh

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Santosh Kumar Guru

Council of Scientific and Industrial Research

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Shashi Bhushan

Nanyang Technological University

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