The 2-oxoglutarate (2OG)-dependent Jumonji C domain (JmjC) family is the largest family of histone lysine demethylases. There is interest in developing small-molecule probes that modulate JmjC activity to investigate their biological roles. 5-Carboxy-8-hydroxyquinoline (IOX1) is the most potent broad-spectrum inhibitor of 2OG oxygenases, including the JmjC demethylases, reported to date; however, it suffers from low cell permeability. Here, we describe structure-activity relationship studies leading to the discovery of an n-octyl ester form of IOX1 with improved cellular potency (EC50 value of 100 to 4 μM). These findings are supported by in vitro inhibition and selectivity studies, docking studies, activity versus toxicity analysis in cell cultures, and intracellular uptake measurements. The n-octyl ester was found to have improved cell permeability; it was found to inhibit some JmjC demethylases in its intact ester form and to be more selective than IOX1. The n-octyl ester of IOX1 should find utility as a starting point for the development of JmjC inhibitors and as a use as a cell-permeable tool compound for studies investigating the roles of 2OG oxygenases in epigenetic regulation.
2-oxoglutarate (2OG) oxygenases
,cell permeability
,epigenetics
,inhibitors
,jmjc histone demethylases
,structure-activity relationships
,Cell Membrane Permeability
,Cell Survival
,Dose-Response Relationship, Drug
,Enzyme Inhibitors
,Esters
,HeLa Cells
,Humans
,Hydroxyquinolines
,Jumonji Domain-Containing Histone Demethylases
,Models, Molecular
,Molecular Structure
,Structure-Activity Relationship