4.6 Article

Development of Novel Pyridine-Thiazole Hybrid Molecules as Potential Anticancer Agents

Journal

MOLECULES
Volume 27, Issue 19, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/molecules27196219

Keywords

drug development; thiazoles; cancer; tumor cells; PARP

Funding

  1. Polish National Agency for Academic Exchange under the Strategic Partnerships program [BPI/PST/2021/1/00002/U/00001]
  2. Ministry of Health of Ukraine [0121U100690]
  3. National Research Foundation of Ukraine [2020.02/0035]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Novel pyridine-thiazole hybrid molecules showed high antiproliferative activity against various cancer cell lines, suggesting their potential as anticancer agents. The selective cytotoxicity of these compounds prompted further investigation into their mechanisms of action, which may be related to inducing genetic instability in tumor cells.
Novel pyridine-thiazole hybrid molecules were synthesized and subjected to physico-chemical characterization and screening of their cytotoxic action towards a panel of cell lines derived from different types of tumors (carcinomas of colon, breast, and lung, glioblastoma and leukemia), and normal human keratinocytes, for comparison. High antiproliferative activity of the 3-(2-fluorophenyl)-1-[4-methyl-2-(pyridin-2-ylamino)-thiazol-5-yl]-propenone 3 and 4-(2-{1-(2-fluorophenyl)-3-[4-methyl-2-(pyridin-2-ylamino)-thiazol-5-yl]-3-oxopropylsulfanyl}-acetylamino)-benzoic acid ethyl ester 4 was revealed. The IC50 of the compound 3 in HL-60 cells of the acute human promyelocytic leukemia was 0.57 mu M, while in the pseudo-normal human cell lines, the IC50 of this compound was >50 mu M, which suggests that the compounds 3 and 4 might be perspective anticancer agents. The detected selectivity of the derivatives 3 and 4 for cancer cell lines inspired us to study the mechanisms of their cytotoxic action. It was shown that preincubation of tumor cells with Fluzaparib (inhibitor of PARP1) reduced the cytotoxic activity of the derivatives 3 and 4 by more than twice. The ability of these compounds to affect DNA nativity and cause changes in nucleus morphology allows for the suggestion that the mechanism of action of the novel pyridine-thiazole derivatives might be related to inducing the genetic instability in tumor cells.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available