Bioactivity | AES-350 is a potent and orally active HDAC6 inhibitor with an IC50 and a Ki of 0.0244 μM and 0.035 μM, respectively. AES-350 is also against HDAC3, HDAC8 in an enzymatic activity assay with IC50 values of 0.187 μM and 0.245 μM, respectively. AES-350 triggers apoptosis in AML cells through HDAC inhibition and can be used for acute myeloid leukemia (AML) research[1]. |
Invitro | In contrast, AES-350 has submicromolar activity (IC50=0.58±0.13 μM) against MV4-11 cells than to that of vorinostat (IC50=0.31±0.061 μM). AES-350 is more ligand efficient and exemplifies a large therapeutic index (IC50>30 μM in noncancerous MRC-9 cells). AES-350 is also shown to be effective in AML-3 (acute myeloid leukemia) cells (IC50=0.73 ± 0.12 μM)[1].AES-350 (0.25-4 μM; 18 hours) induces MV4-11 cells apoptosis in a dose-dependent manner. The late apoptosis ratios are 8.74%, 11.7%,16.08%, 30.97%, and 38.48%, respectively at 0.25 μM-4 μM[1].An ELISA is performed using HeLa cervical cancer cell lysates, and HeLa cells highly express HDAC6 and are sensitive to AES-350. Correspondingly, ELISA assays depicted a dose-dependent increase in HDAC6 inhibition (IC50=0.58±0.13 μM), Western blot analysis shows that AES-350 (0.1-10 μM) induces a dose-dependent increase in acetylated α-tubulin (Ac-α-tubulin), a substrate of HDAC[1]. Apoptosis Analysis[1] Cell Line: |
Name | AES-350 |
CAS | 847249-57-4 |
Formula | C18H20N2O3 |
Molar Mass | 312.36 |
Transport | Room temperature in continental US; may vary elsewhere. |
Storage | 4°C, protect from light *In solvent : -80°C, 6 months; -20°C, 1 month (protect from light) |