Development of 5-hydroxybenzothiophene derivatives as multi-kinase inhibitors with potential anti-cancer activity.
Yara A Abd El-RahmanPo-Jen ChenAhmed K ElHadyShun-Hua ChenHsin-Chieh LinDalia S El-GamilYoussef AboushadyAshraf H AbadiMatthias EngelMohammad Abdel-HalimPublished in: Future medicinal chemistry (2024)
Aim: Chemoresistance in cancer challenges the classical therapeutic strategy of 'one molecule-one target'. To combat this, multi-target therapies that inhibit various cancer-relevant targets simultaneously are proposed. Methods & results: We introduce 5-hydroxybenzothiophene derivatives as effective multi-target kinase inhibitors, showing notable growth inhibitory activity across different cancer cell lines. Specifically, compound 16b , featuring a 5-hydroxybenzothiophene hydrazide scaffold, emerged as a potent inhibitor, displaying low IC 50 values against key kinases and demonstrating significant anti-cancer effects, particularly against U87MG glioblastoma cells. It induced G2/M cell cycle arrest, apoptosis and inhibited cell migration by modulating apoptotic markers. Conclusion: 16b represents a promising lead for developing new anti-cancer agents targeting multiple kinases with affinity to the hydroxybenzothiophene core.