N-allyl quinoxaline derivative exhibited potent and selective cytotoxicity through EGFR/VEGFR-mediated apoptosis: In vitro and in vivo studies.
Mohamed S NafieMohab A AliMagdy M YoussefPublished in: Journal of biochemical and molecular toxicology (2024)
The cytotoxic activity, EGFR/VEGFR2 target inhibition, apoptotic activity, RT-PCR gene expression, in vivo employing a solid-Ehrlich carcinoma model, and in silico investigations for highlighting the binding affinity of eight quinoxaline derivatives were tested for anticancer activities. The results showed that compound 8 (N-allyl quinoxaline) had potent cytotoxicity against A594 and MCF-7 cancer cells with IC 50 values of 0.86 and 1.06 µM, respectively, with noncytotoxic activity against WISH and MCF-10A cells having IC 50 values more than 100 µM. Furthermore, it strongly induced apoptotic cell death in A549 and MCF-7 cells by 43.13% and 34.07%, respectively, stopping the cell cycle at S and G1-phases. For the molecular target, the results showed that compound 8 had a promising EGFR inhibition activity with an IC 50 value of 0.088 µM compared to Sorafenib (IC 50 = 0.056 µM), and it had a promising VEGFR2 inhibition activity with an IC 50 value of 0.108 µM compared to Sorafenib (IC 50 = 0.049 µM). Treatment with compound 8 ameliorated biochemical and histochemical parameters near normal in the in vivo investigation, with a tumor inhibition ratio of 68.19% compared to 64.8% for 5-FU treatment. Finally, the molecular docking study demonstrated the binding affinity through binding energy and interactive binding mode inside the EGFR/VEGFR2 proteins. Potent EGFR and VEGFR2 inhibition of compound 8 suggests its potential for development as a selective anticancer drug.
Keyphrases
- small cell lung cancer
- cell death
- molecular docking
- epidermal growth factor receptor
- cell cycle
- tyrosine kinase
- cell cycle arrest
- gene expression
- vascular endothelial growth factor
- induced apoptosis
- anti inflammatory
- dna binding
- emergency department
- dna methylation
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- molecular dynamics simulations
- transcription factor
- signaling pathway
- drug induced
- replacement therapy
- case control