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Novel Phthalazin-1(2H)-One Derivatives Displaying a Dithiocarbamate Moiety as Potential Anticancer Agents.

Noemí VilaPedro BesadaJose BreaMaría Isabel LozaCarmen Terán
Published in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2022)
Nowadays, cancer disease seems to be the second most common cause of death worldwide. Molecular hybridization is a drug design strategy that has provided promising results against multifactorial diseases, including cancer. In this work, two series of phthalazinone-dithiocarbamate hybrids were described, compounds 6 - 8 , which display the dithiocarbamate scaffold at N2, and compounds 9 , in which this moiety was placed at C4. The proposed compounds were successfully synthesized via the corresponding aminoalkyl phthalazinone derivatives and using a one-pot reaction with carbon disulfide, anhydrous H 3 PO 4 , and different benzyl or propargyl bromides. The antiproliferative effects of the titled compounds were explored against three human cancer cell lines (A2780, NCI-H460, and MCF-7). The preliminary results revealed significant differences in activity and selectivity depending on the dithiocarbamate moiety location. Thus, in general terms, compounds 6 - 8 displayed better activity against the A-2780 and MCF-7 cell lines, while most of the analogues of the 9 group were selective toward the NCI-H460 cell line. Compounds 6e , 8e , 6g , 9a - b , 9d , and 9g with IC 50 values less than 10 µM were the most promising. The drug-likeness and toxicity properties of the novel phthalazinone-dithiocarbamate hybrids were predicted using Swiss-ADME and ProTox web servers, respectively.
Keyphrases
  • papillary thyroid
  • squamous cell
  • endothelial cells
  • molecular docking
  • breast cancer cells
  • single molecule
  • risk assessment
  • young adults
  • molecular dynamics simulations
  • structural basis