Biological Activity
ZW4864 (free base) is an orally active and selective β catenin/B-Cell lymphoma 9 protein-protein interaction (β catenin/BCL9 PPI) inhibitor. ZW4864 (free base) inhibits β catenin/BCL9 PPI with a Ki value of 0.76 μM and an IC50 value of 0.87 μM[1].
ZW4864 (10~40 μM; 24 hours; SW480 and MBA-MD-231 cells) (free base) decreases the expression levels of Axin2 and cyclin D1 proteins[1].ZW4864 (10~40 μM; 72 hours; MDA-MB231, MCF10A and MDA-MB-468 cells) (free base) selectively triggeres rapid apoptosis of triple-negative breast cancer cells with hyperactive β-catenin signaling while sparing normal mammary epithelial MCF10A cells[1].ZW4864 (10~40 μM; 24 hours; SW480 and MBA-MD-231 cells) (free base) suppresses the transcription of β-catenin target genes in a concentration-dependent manner without affecting the expression of HPRT, a house-keeper gene, in both SW480 and Wnt 3a-activated MDA-MB-231 cells[1].ZW4864 (free base) binds with β-catenin and selectively disrupts the protein-protein interaction (PPI) between B-cell lymphoma 9 (BCL9) and β-catenin while sparing the β-catenin/E-cadherin PPI. ZW4864 (free base) dose-dependently suppresses β-catenin signaling activation, downregulates oncogenic β-catenin target genes, and abrogates invasiveness of β-catenin-dependent cancer cells. ZW4864 (free base) suppresses TOPFlash luciferase activities in β-catenin expressing HEK293 cells in a dose-dependent manner with an IC50 of 11 μM. ZW4864 (free base) also dose-dependently suppresses the TOPFlash luciferase activities in SW480 and Wnt 3a-activated MDA-MB-468 cells with the IC50s of 7.0 and 6.3 μM, respectively. ZW4864 (free base) selectively suppresses transactivation of β-catenin signaling[1].
ZW4864 (20 mg/kg; p.o.) (free base) exhibits good pharmacokinetic properties with an oral bioavailability (F) of 83 %[1].ZW4864 (90 mg/kg; p.o.) (free base) shows a variation in tumor growth in mice[1].ZW4864 (free base) shows good pharmacokinetic properties and effectively suppresses β-catenin target gene expression in the patient-derived xenograft mouse model[1].