Hypoxia is a characteristic of many solid tumors resulting from accelerated cellular proliferation and inadequate vascularization. HIF-1 is a transcription factor critical for maintaining cellular homeostasis in, and adaptively responding to, low oxygen environments. HIF-1 becomes activated through binding to the transcriptional co-activator protein p300. Disruption of the HIF-1/p300 interaction could potentially modulate HIF-1 activity.
Researchers at the National Cancer Institute (NCI) have developed small molecule compounds that inhibit the activity of HIF-1. The HIF-1 inhibitor compounds are designed around the scaffold of naturally occurring metabolite eudistidine. Compounds eudistidine A and C have been shown to disrupt the HIF-1/p300 interaction in vitro. Eudistidine C has also inhibited growth of malaria at low micromolar concentrations.