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New arylated benzo[h]quinolines induce anti-cancer activity by oxidative stress-mediated DNA damage
Authors
A Sharma
D Dubé
+50 more
D Durocher
D Ghosh
DK Yadav
DK Yadav
DK Yadav
DK Yadav
DK Yadav
DK Yadav
DK Yadav
DK Yadav
F Farhanullah
G Roma
H Nishii
H Yoon
J Yang
K Abouzid
K Bedard
LR Ferreira
M Ahmed
M Behforouz
M Gopal
M Pannala
M Selvakumaran
M Toshiyuki
M Yamaura
MD Kelly
MG Ferlin
MJ Mulvihill
N Kumar
N Kumar
N Kumar
N Suvannang
P Attri
R Pratap
R Pratap
RD Larsen
S Singh
S Singh
S Singh
SI Alqasoumi
SI Alqasoumi
SP Jackson
T Miyashita
W Kemnitzer
Y Cheng
Y Shiloh
Y Tominaga
YH Kim
YL Chen
YL Zhao
Publication date
1 January 2016
Publisher
'Springer Science and Business Media LLC'
Doi
View
on
PubMed
Abstract
© 2016 The Author(s).The anti-cancer activity of the benzo[h]quinolines was evaluated on cultured human skin cancer (G361), lung cancer (H460), breast cancer (MCF7) and colon cancer (HCT116) cell lines. The inhibitory effect of these compounds on the cell growth was determined by the MTT assay. The compounds 3e, 3f, 3h and 3j showed potential cytotoxicity against these human cancer cell lines. Effect of active compounds on DNA oxidation and expression of apoptosis related gene was studied. We also developed a quantitative method to measure the activity of cyclin-dependent kinases-2 (CDK2) by western blotting in the presence of active compound. In addition, molecular docking revealed that benzo[h]quinolines can correctly dock into the hydrophobic pocket of the targets receptor protein aromatase and CDK2, while their bioavailability/drug-likeness was predicted to be acceptable but requires future optimization. These findings reveal that benzo[h]quinolines act as anti-cancer agents by inducing oxidative stress-mediated DNA damage
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info:doi/10.1038%2Fsrep38128
Last time updated on 04/12/2019
espace@Curtin
See this paper in CORE
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oai:espace.curtin.edu.au:20.50...
Last time updated on 18/04/2019