Journal

Molecular Diversity

Papers (6)

Potential VEGFR2 inhibitors for managing metastatic cervical cancer: insights from molecular dynamics and free energy landscape studies

Metastatic cervical cancer, the advanced stage where the cancer spreads beyond the cervix to other parts of the body, poses significant treatment challenges and is associated with poor survival rates. Vascular Endothelial Growth Factor Receptor 2 (VEGFR2), a critical angiogenic mediator, is upregulated in metastatic cervical cancer, driving the formation of new blood vessels that fuel tumor growth and spread, making it an attractive target for anti-angiogenic therapies aimed at halting metastasis. This study aims to determine the anti-angiogenic effects of natural compounds to identify new VEGFR2 inhibitors for managing metastatic cervical cancer. The potential effect of these compounds as VEGFR2 inhibitors at the structural level was assessed using various methods such as virtual screening, docking, MD simulations (1000 ns), binding free energy calculations, and free energy landscape analysis. Four compounds, including IMPHY007574, IMPHY004129, IMPHY008783, and IMPHY004928, were found to be potential VEGFR2 inhibitors. Among the structures analyzed in the present work, IMPHY007574 revealed the highest binding stability with VEGFR2 and the most favorable interaction pattern, thus proving the possibility of its use as an effective anti-angiogenic compound. The other three compounds also demonstrated a reasonably good promise in VEGFR2 inhibition. These findings provide a foundation for developing novel therapeutic strategies for metastatic cervical cancer, potentially overcoming drug resistance and improving patient survival rates.

Benzimidazole-linked pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine conjugates: synthesis and detail evaluation as potential anticancer agents

A library of benzimidazole briged pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine (6a-q) was designed, synthesized and subjected for evaluation for cytotoxic potential. Antiproliferative activity, ranging from 3.1-51.5 μM, was observed against a panel of cancer cell lines which included MCF-7 (breast cancer), A549 (lung cancer), HeLa (cervical cancer) and SiHa (cervical cancer). Among them, 6k, 6l, 6n and 6o have shown significant cytotoxicity and were investigated further to study their probable mechanism of action against MCF-7 cell line. Accumulation of cells at sub-G1 phase was observed in flow cytometric analysis. The detachment of cells from substratum and membrane blebbing seen under bright field microscopy supports the ability of these conjugates to induce apoptosis. Immunostaining and western blot analysis showed EGFR, p-EGFR, STAT3, and p-STAT3 significant downregulation. Western blot analysis demonstrated an elevated level of apoptotic proteins such as p53, p21, Bax, whereas a decrease in the antiapoptotic protein Bcl-2 and procaspase-9, confirming the ability of these conjugates to trigger cell death by apoptosis. EGFR kinase assay confirms the specific activity of conjugates. Molecular docking simulation study disclosed that these molecules fit well in ATP-binding pocket of EGFR. The analysis of docking poses and the atomic interactions of different conjugates rationalize the structural-activity relationship in this series. Benzimidazole-linked pyrazolo[1,5-a]pyrimidine conjugates were synthesized and evaluated for their anticancer potential. All the conjugates have significant anticancer potential. Further mechanistic studies revealed that these conjugates arrest cancer cell growth by EGFR/STAT3 inhibition.

Unraveling the molecular mechanism of l-menthol against cervical cancer based on network pharmacology, molecular docking and in vitro analysis

Cervical cancer is a major cause of gynecological related mortalities in developing countries. Cisplatin, a potent chemotherapeutic agent used for treating advanced cervical cancer exhibits side effects and resistance development. The current study was aimed to investigate the repurposing of l-menthol as a potential therapeutic drug against cervical cancer. L-menthol was predicted to be non-toxic with good pharmacokinetic properties based on SwissADME and pkCSM analysis. Subsequently, 543 and 1664 targets of l-menthol and cervical cancer were identified using STITCH, BATMAN-TCM, PharmMapper and CTD databases. STRING and Cytoscape analysis of the merged protein-protein interaction network revealed 107 core targets of l- menthol against cervical cancer. M-CODE identified highly connected clusters between the core targets which through KEGG analysis were found to be enriched in pathways related to apoptosis and adherence junctions. Molecular docking showed that l- menthol targeted E6, E6AP and E7 onco-proteins of HPV that interact and inactivate TP53 and Rb1 in cervical cancer, respectively. Molecular docking also showed good binding affinity of l-menthol toward proteins associated with apoptosis and migration. Molecular dynamics simulation confirmed stability of the docked complexes. In vitro analysis confirmed that l-menthol was cytotoxic towards cervical cancer CaSki cells and altered expression of TP53, Rb1, CDKN1A, E2F1, NFKB1, Akt-1, caspase-3, CDH1 and MMP-2 genes identified through network pharmacology approach. Schematic representation of the work flow depicting the potential of l-menthol to target cervical cancer.

Network-based drug repurposing identifies small molecule drugs as immune checkpoint inhibitors for endometrial cancer

Endometrial cancer (EC) is the 6th most common cancer in women around the world. Alone in the United States (US), 66,200 new cases and 13,030 deaths are expected to occur in 2023 which needs the rapid development of potential therapies against EC. Here, a network-based drug-repurposing strategy is developed which led to the identification of 16 FDA-approved drugs potentially repurposable for EC as potential immune checkpoint inhibitors (ICIs). A network of EC-associated immune checkpoint proteins (ICPs)-induced protein interactions (P-ICP) was constructed. As a result of network analysis of P-ICP, top key target genes closely interacting with ICPs were shortlisted followed by network proximity analysis in drug-target interaction (DTI) network and pathway cross-examination which identified 115 distinct pathways of approved drugs as potential immune checkpoint inhibitors. The presented approach predicted 16 drugs to target EC-associated ICPs-induced pathways, three of which have already been used for EC and six of them possess immunomodulatory properties providing evidence of the validity of the strategy. Classification of the predicted pathways indicated that 15 drugs can be divided into two distinct pathway groups, containing 17 immune pathways and 98 metabolic pathways. In addition, drug-drug correlation analysis provided insight into finding useful drug combinations. This fair and verified analysis creates new opportunities for the quick repurposing of FDA-approved medications in clinical trials.

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

ISSN

1381-1991