Synthesis, antitumor activity evaluation, and DNA-binding study of coumarin-based agents.
Kamilia M AminAly M TahaRiham F GeorgeNada M MohamedFardous F ElsendunyPublished in: Archiv der Pharmazie (2017)
A novel series of coumarin-thiadiazole heterocycle derivatives was synthesized by the nucleophilic substitution reaction. The synthesized compounds were structurally verified by IR, 1 H NMR, 13 C NMR, mass spectra, and elemental analyses. The antitumor activity of the synthesized compounds was evaluated through DNA binding assays and the 60-cell line panel according to the US NCI-DTP protocol or a selection of human tumor cell lines: breast cancer (MCF-7), liver cancer (HepG-2), and colorectal cancer (HCT-116). Most of the compounds had better DNA/ethidium bromide fluorescence quenching rather than methyl green displacement, suggesting superior DNA intercalation over DNA groove binding. Compounds 8 and 14b showed the best quenching effect with KSV = 4.27 × 105 M-1 . Moreover, the results for compounds 8, 4c, and 4e revealed a possible dual DNA binding mode with the intercalation to be superior, with KSV 4.27 × 105 , 3.96 × 105 , and 3.51 × 105 M-1 , respectively, compared to 42%, 45%, and 43% methyl green displacement, respectively. Out of the 60-cell line panel, the leukemia HL-60 cell line was the most susceptible to growth inhibition when treated with 14a, resulting in 61% growth, followed by the lung carcinoma cell line NCI-H522 showing 67% growth when treated with 9. Moreover, compound 10c had an IC50 value of 24.9 μg/mL against the HepG-2 cell line.
Keyphrases
- dna binding
- transcription factor
- single molecule
- circulating tumor
- cell free
- magnetic resonance
- high resolution
- endothelial cells
- randomized controlled trial
- bone marrow
- acute myeloid leukemia
- fluorescent probe
- single cell
- energy transfer
- newly diagnosed
- signaling pathway
- cell death
- mass spectrometry
- cell cycle arrest
- density functional theory