(−)‐Tarchonanthuslactone: Design of New Analogues,Evaluation of their Antiproliferative Activity on Cancer Cell Lines,and Preliminary Mechanistic Studies |
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Authors: | Luiz Fernando Toneto Novaes Dr. Carolina Martins Avila Dr. Karin Juliane Pelizzaro‐Rocha Dr. Débora Barbosa Vendramini‐Costa Marina Pereira Dias Dr. Daniela Barreto Barbosa Trivella Prof. Dr. João Ernesto de Carvalho Prof. Dr. Carmen Veríssima Ferreira‐Halder Prof. Dr. Ronaldo Aloise Pilli |
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Affiliation: | 1. Institute of Chemistry, University of Campinas (Unicamp), C.P. 6154, 13084‐971, Campinas, SP (Brazil);2. Department of Biochemistry, Biology Institute, University of Campinas (Unicamp), 13083‐862, Campinas, SP (Brazil);3. Division of Pharmacology and Toxicology—CPQBA, University of Campinas (Unicamp), 13083‐970, Campinas, SP (Brazil);4. Brazilian Biosciences National Laboratory, National Center for Research in Energy and Material, 13083‐970, Campinas, SP (Brazil) |
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Abstract: | Natural products containing the α,β‐unsaturated δ‐lactone skeleton have been shown to possess a variety of biological activities. The natural product (?)‐tarchonanthuslactone ( 1 ) possessing this privileged scaffold is a popular synthetic target, but its biological activity remains underexplored. Herein, the total syntheses of dihydropyran‐2‐ones modeled on the structure of 1 were undertaken. These compounds were obtained in overall yields of 17–21 % based on the Keck asymmetric allylation reaction and were evaluated in vitro against eight different cultured human tumor cell lines. We further conducted initial investigation into the mechanism of action of selected analogues. Dihydropyran‐2‐one 8 [(S,E)‐(6‐oxo‐3,6‐dihydro‐2H‐pyran‐2‐yl)methyl 3‐(3,4‐dihydroxyphenyl)acrylate], a simplified analogue of (?)‐tarchonanthuslactone ( 1 ) bearing an additional electrophilic site and a catechol system, was the most cytotoxic and selective compound against six of the eight cancer cell lines analyzed, including the pancreatic cancer cell line. Preliminary studies on the mechanism of action of compound 8 on pancreatic cancer demonstrated that apoptotic cell death takes place mediated by an increase in the level of reactive oxygen species. It appears as though compound 8 , possessing two Michael acceptors and a catechol system, may be a promising scaffold for the selective killing of cancer cells, and thus, it deserves further investigation to determine its potential for cancer therapy. |
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Keywords: | antitumor agents cancer natural products reactive oxygen species tarchonanthuslactone |
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