Cancer therapeutic potential of thiadiazole hybrids incorporating pharmacologically active indole and coumarin moieties have not been explored much. In the current investigation, three new thiadiazole hybrids with spacers of varying… Click to show full abstract
Cancer therapeutic potential of thiadiazole hybrids incorporating pharmacologically active indole and coumarin moieties have not been explored much. In the current investigation, three new thiadiazole hybrids with spacers of varying lengths linking indole and thiadiazole units were synthesized and their structures were well-established using various spectroscopic techniques. 3-(1-(5-(3-(1H-indol-3-yl)propyl)-1,3,4-thiadiazol-2-ylimino)ethyl)-6-bromo-2H-chromen-2-one (IPTBC) exhibited dose-dependent cytotoxicity in breast adenocarcinoma (MCF-7) cells. The circumvention of apoptosis is a prominent hallmark of cancer and hence triggering apoptosis in specific cancer cells is one of the convenient and widely used approaches for the development of anticancer chemotherapeutics. The induction of apoptosis upon treatment with IPTBC was confirmed by multiple apoptosis assays like Acridine orange-ethidium bromide, Hoechst staining, TUNEL staining, and colorimetric quantification using APOPercentage™ Apoptosis assay. The apoptosis initialisation through the active involvement of caspases was confirmed by caspase profiling tests. The wound healing assay displayed an intense impairment in the motility of MCF-7 cells suggesting the anti-metastatic potential of IPTBC. The ability of IPTBC to inhibit the antiapoptotic Bcl-2 protein by acting as a small molecule BH3 mimetic was explored through docking simulation studies. Although auxiliary investigations are warranted with this promising thiadiazole hybrid IPTBC, the perspective anticancer potential through programmed cell death, anti-metastatic and probable Bcl-2 inhibitory action will enable its further exploration in oncology.
               
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