New pyrrolidine-carboxamide derivatives as dual antiproliferative EGFR/CDK2 inhibitors.
Frias Obaid Arhema FrejatBingbing ZhaoNooruldeen FuraijitLihong WangHesham A Abou-ZiedHazem M FathyFatma A M MohamedBahaa G M YoussifChunli WuPublished in: Chemical biology & drug design (2024)
Cancer is one of the leading causes of mortality worldwide, making it a public health concern. A novel series of pyrrolidine-carboxamide derivatives 7a-q were developed and examined in a cell viability assay utilizing a human mammary gland epithelial cell line (MCF-10A), where all the compounds exhibited no cytotoxic effects and more than 85% cell viability at a concentration of 50 μM. Antiproliferative activity was evaluated in vitro against four panels of cancer cell lines A-549, MCF-7, Panc-1, and HT-29. Compounds 7e, 7g, 7k, 7n, and 7o were the most active as antiproliferative agents capable of triggering apoptosis. Compound 7g was the most potent of all the derivatives, with a mean IC 50 of 0.90 μM compared to IC 50 of 1.10 μM for doxorubicin. Compound 7g inhibited A-549 (epithelial cancer cell line), MCF-7 (breast cancer cell line), and HT-29 (colon cancer cell line) more efficiently than doxorubicin. EGFR inhibitory assay results of 7e, 7g, 7k, 7n, and 7o demonstrated that the tested compounds inhibited EGFR with IC 50 values ranging from 87 to 107 nM in comparison with the reference drug erlotinib (IC 50 = 80 nM). 7e, 7g, 7k, 7n, and 7o inhibited CDK2 efficiently in comparison to the reference dinaciclib (IC 50 = 20 nM), with IC 50 values ranging from 15 to 31 nM. The results of inhibitory activity assay against different CDK isoforms revealed that the tested compounds had preferential inhibitory activity against the CDK2 isoform.
Keyphrases
- papillary thyroid
- small cell lung cancer
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- public health
- cell cycle
- photodynamic therapy
- squamous cell
- tyrosine kinase
- high throughput
- breast cancer cells
- drug delivery
- endothelial cells
- emergency department
- squamous cell carcinoma
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- cancer therapy
- cell proliferation
- advanced non small cell lung cancer
- cardiovascular events
- risk factors